Obesity
Upper GI Bleed
Cancer
GERD
Gastric Potpourri
100

This “hunger hormone” is produced in the enteroendocrine cells of the GI tract (especially the stomach) and levels reduce significantly after sleeve gastrectomy

What is ghrelin

100

The first step in management of patient with upper GI bleeding

What are the ABCs (or resuscitative measures)

100

This risk factor for gastric cancer can be found in hotdogs and other processed meats

What are nitrates

100

Medication which reduces the amount of acid secreted by your stomach but has no effect on the H-K ATPase

What is Cimetedine/H2 blocker

100

Type of paraesophageal hernia that contains an additional organ

What is Type IV paraesophageal hernia

200

This bariatric operation may worsen GERD symptoms postoperatively

What is sleeve gastrectomy

200

Risk of re-bleeding when an adherent clot is visualized on EGD for UGI bleeding

What carries a risk of 15-25%

200

In gastric cancer, this T stage invades the muscularis propria

What is T2

200

This type of peptic ulcer is, by definition, pre-pyloric

What is a Type III peptic ulcer

200

Name for the diagnosis when the stomach rotates around its longitudinal axis

What is organoaxial gastric volvulus

300

This vessel provides the blood supply to the gastric pouch in the RYGB

What is the left gastric artery

300

Therapy of choice when patient re-bleeds after first EGD for bleeding

What is repeat endoscopy

300

Autosomal dominant mutation associated with hereditary gastric cancer

What is CDH1

300

On rare occasions, you can search this triangle for the culprit of acid hypersecretion

What is the gastrinoma triangle (boarders: confluence of cystic duct and CBD, junct of 2nd and 3rdportion of duo, medially junction of neck and body of pancreas)

300

A disease entity with symptoms of severe heartburn, pain that is inadequately treated with PPI, but responds to ursodeoxycholic acid or cholestyramine

What is Bile reflux gastritis

400

The potential space between the small bowel limbs and the transverse mesocolon after any type of gastrojejunostomy

What is a Peterson’s defect

400

Procedure that is performed when bleeding cannot be controlled endoscopically or by IR embolization

What is laparotomy, anterior gastrotomy, oversew bleeding area, biopsy, close gastrotomy

400

Dissection which includes removal of nodes along left gastric, common hepatic, celiac and splenic arteries (stations 7-11).

What is a D2 dissection (as opposed to D1 which is the removal of perigastric nodes along greater and lesser curve - recommended dissection per NCCN)

400

Failure to divide this nerve during an acid-reducing surgery can lead to recurrent ulcers.

What is the criminal nerve of grassi (first branch of posterior trunk of vagus n.)

400

This post-gastrectomy complication is due to rapid carbohydrate load causing an insulin surge and resulting in rebound hypoglycemia

What is late dumping syndrome

500

Three potential sources of hemorrhage when dividing tissues along the lesser curve during RYGB/ creation of gastric pouch

What are the left gastric artery, high short gastric vessels, splenic vessels

500

A procedure to consider in a patient with refractory/recurrent bleeding from gastric varices

What is TIPS

500

The appropriate operation for Siewart II tumors

Total gastrectomy with esophagojejunostomy

500

Some data show less postoperative dysphagia for this operation antireflux operation compared with a full 360degree wrap

Toupet (posterior 270 deg) fundoplication

500

Length of roux limb to reduce risk of bile reflux

What is at least 50cm