This document provides an overview of acute gastrointestinal bleeding. It defines upper gastrointestinal bleeding and discusses its causes, including variceal and non-variceal sources. Signs and symptoms are outlined. The approach involves taking a thorough history and physical exam. Key lab tests include CBC, LFTs, coagulation panels and endoscopy. Treatment depends on the bleeding source, and may include endoscopic methods, radiological embolization, surgery, or medications like PPIs and vasoactive drugs. Complications are also reviewed.
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Upper Gastrointestinal bleeding
1. Prepared by :
Inzar Yasin
Ammar Labib
Supervised by :
Dr. Abdulaziz Yousif Mansour
2. INTRODUCTION
Acute gastrointestinal bleeding is a potentially life-threatening abdominal
emergency that remains a common cause of hospitalization.
Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) is defined as bleeding derived
from a source proximal to the ligament of Treitz.
Can be categorized as either variceal or non-variceal. Variceal is a
complication of end stage liver disease. While non variceal bleeding
associated with peptic ulcer disease or other causes of UGIB.
UGIB is 4 times as common as bleeding from lower GIT, with a higher
incidence in male.
3.
4.
Esophageal causes:
causes
Esophageal
varices
Esophagitis
CAUSE
S
Esophageal
cancer
Esophageal ulcers
Mallory-Weiss tear
Gastric causes:
causes
Gastric
ulcer
Gastric cancer
Gastritis
Gastric varices
Dieulafoy's lesions
5.
CAUS
ES
Duodenal causes:
causes
Duodenal
ulcer
Vascular malformation including
aorto-enteric fistulae
Hematobilia, or bleeding from the
biliary tree
Hemosuccus pancreaticus, or
bleeding from the pancreatic duct
Severe superior mesenteric artery
syndrome
8. COMMON
:PRESENTATION
1.
Hematemesis: vomiting of blood ,could be: Digested blood
2.
Melena: stool consisting of partially digested blood (black
3.
Hematochezia usually represents a lower GI source of
in the stomach(coffee-ground emesis that indicate slower rate
of bleeding) or fresh/unaltered blood (gross blood and clots,
indicates rapid bleeding)
tarry, semi solid, shiny and has a distinctive odor, when its
present it indicates that blood has been present in the GI
tract for at least 14 h. The more proximal the bleeding site,
the more likely melena will occur.
bleeding, although an upper GI lesion may bleed so briskly
that blood does not remain in the bowel long enough for
melena to develop.
10. •
Drug history: NSAIDs, Aspirin, corticosteroids,
anticoagulants, (SSRIs) particularly fluoxetine and
sertraline.
•
History of epistaxis or hemoptysis to rule out the GI
source of bleeding.
•
Past medical :previous episodes of upper
gastrointestinal bleeding, diabetes mellitus;
coronary artery disease; chronic renal or liver
disease; or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
•
Past surgical: previous abdominal surgery
11. APPROACH:
.CONT
Examination :
•
General examination and systemic
examinations
•
VITALS:
Pulse = Thready pulse
BP = Orthostatic Hypotension
•
SIGNS of shock:
Cold extremeties, Tachycardia, Hypotension
Chest pain, Confusion, Delirium, Oliguria, and etc.
12. •
SKIN changes:
Cirrhosis – Palmer erythema, spider nevi
Bleeding disorders – Purpura /Echymosis
Coagulation disorders – Haemarthrosis, Muscle
hematoma.
•
Signs of dehydration (dry mucosa, sunken eyes, skin turgor
reduced).
•
Signs of a tumour may be present (nodular liver, abdominal
mass, lymphadenopathy, and etc.
•
DRE : fresh blood, occult blood, bloody diarrhea
Respiratory, CVS, CNS For comorbid diseases
•
13. :LAB DIAGNOSIS
•
CBC with Platelet Count, and Differential
A complete blood count (CBC) is necessary to assess the
level of blood loss. CBC should be checked frequently(q4-6h)
during the first day.
•
Hemoglobin Value, Type and Crossmatch Blood
The patient should be crossmatched for 2-6 units, based on
the rate of active bleeding.The hemoglobin level should be
monitored serially in order to follow the trend. An unstable
Hb level may signify ongoing hemorrhage requiring further
intervention.
14. •
LFT- to detect underlying liver disease
•
RFT- to detect underlying renal disease
•
Calcium level- to detect hyperparathyroidism
and in monitoring calcium in patients receiving
multiple transfusions of citrated blood
•
Gastrin level
15. •
The BUN-to- creatinine ratio increases with upper
gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB). A ratio of greater than
36 in a patient without renal insufficiency is suggestive of
UGIB.
•
The patient's prothrombin time (PT), activated partial
thromboplastin time, and International Normalized Ratio
(INR) should be checked to document the presence of a
coagulopathy
16. •
Prolongation of the PT based on an INR of more than
1.5 may indicate moderate liver impairment.
•
A fibrinogen level of less than 100 mg/dL also indicates
advanced liver disease with extremely poor synthetic
function
17. :ENDOSCOPY
•
Initial diagnostic examination for all patients
presumed to have UGIB
•
Endoscopy should be performed immediately after
endotracheal intubation (if indicated), hemodynamic
stabilization, and adequate monitoring in an
intensive care unit (ICU) setting have been achieved.
18.
19.
20. :IMAGING
•
CHEST X-RAY-Chest radiographs should be
ordered to exclude aspiration pneumonia, effusion,
and esophageal perforation.
•
Abdominal X-RAY- erect and supine films should
be ordered to exclude perforated viscous and ileus.
21. •
Computed tomography (CT) scanning and
ultrasonography may be indicated for the
evaluation of liver disease with cirrhosis,
cholecystitis with hemorrhage, pancreatitis with
pseudocyst and hemorrhage, aortoenteric fistula,
and other unusual causes of upper GI hemorrhage.
•
Nuclear medicine scans may be useful in
determining the area of active hemorrhage
22.
23. ANGIOGRAPHY
:
Angiography may be useful if bleeding
persists and endoscopy fails to identify a
bleeding site.
Angiography along with transcatheter arterial
embolization (TAE) should be considered for
all patients with a known source of arterial
UGIB that does not respond to endoscopic
management, with active bleeding and a
negative endoscopy.
In cases of aortoenteric fistula, angiography
requires active bleeding (1 mL/min) to be
diagnostic.
24.
25. NASOGASTRIC LAVAGE
A
nasogastric tube is an important diagnostic
tool.
This
procedure may confirm recent bleeding
(coffee ground appearance), possible active
bleeding (red blood in the aspirate that does
not clear), or a lack of blood in the stomach
(active bleeding less likely but does not
exclude an upper GI lesion).
26.
27. BENEFITS OF LAVAGE :
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Better visualization during endoscopy
Give crude estimation of rapidity of bleeding
Prevent the development of Porto systemic
encephalopathy in cirrhosis
Increases PH of stomach, and hence, decreases clot
desolation due to gastric acid dilution
Tube placement can reduce the patient's need to vomit
During gastric lavage use saline and not use large
volume of to avoid water intoxication.
Gastric lavage should be done in alert and cooperative
patient to avoid bronco-pulmonary aspiration
30. MANAGEMENT
Priorities are:
Stabilize the patient: protect airway, restore
circulation.
2. Identify the source of bleeding.
3. Definitive treatment of the cause.
1.
Resuscitation and initial management
Protect
airway: position the patient on side
IV access: use 1-2 large bore cannula
Take blood for: Hb, PCV, PT and cross match
Restore the circulation: if pts
haemodynamically stable give N.S. infusion,
if not give colloid 500ml/1hr and then
crystalloid and continue until blood is
31. o
Transfuse blood for:
o Obvious massive blood loss
o
o
Hematocrit < 25% with active bleeding
Symptoms due to low hematocrit and hemoglobin
o
Platelet transfusions should be offered to patients
who are actively bleeding and have a platelet count
of <50000.
o
Fresh frozen plasma should be used for patients
who have either a fibrinogen level of less than 1
g/litre, or (INR) greater than 1.5 times normal.
o
Over-transfusion may be as damaging as undertransfusion.
32.
Monitor urine output.
Watch for signs of fluid overload (raised JVP, pul.
edema, peripheral edema)
Commence IV PPI, omeprazole 80 mg iv followed
by 8mg/hr for 72 hrs.
Keep the pt nill by mouth for the endoscopy
33. TREATMENT OF VARICEAL BLEEDING
Terlipressin, treatment should be stopped after
definitive homeostasis has been achieved, or after
five days, unless there is another indication for its
use.
Prophylactic antibiotic therapy
Balloon tamponade should be considered as a
temporary salvage treatment for uncontrolled
variceal haemorrhage
34.
35. TREATMENT OF VARICEAL
BLEEDING
1. Oesophageal varices:
Band ligation
Stent insertion is effective for selected
patients
Transjugular
intrahepatic portosystemic shunts
(TIPS) should be considered if bleeding from
oesophageal varices is not controlled by band ligation.
2. Gastric varices:
Endoscopic injection of N-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate
should be used.
TIPS should be offered if bleeding from gastric varices
is not controlled by endoscopic injection of N-butyl-2cyanoacrylate
36.
37.
38.
39. TREATMENT OF NON-VARICEAL
BLEEDING
Endoscopy is now the method of choice for controlling active
peptic-ulcer related UGIB.
Endoscopic therapy should only be delivered to actively
bleeding lesions, non-bleeding visible vessels and, when
technically possible, to ulcers with an adherent blood clot.
Black or red spots or a clean ulcer base with oozing do not
merit endoscopic intervention since these lesions have an
excellent prognosis without intervention.
Adrenaline (epinephrine) should not be used as monotherapy
for the endoscopic treatment of non-variceal UGIB
40. TREATMENT OF NON-VARICEAL
BLEEDING
For the endoscopic treatment of non-variceal UGIB, one of
the following should be used:
1.
A mechanical method (clips) with or without adrenaline
(epinephrine)
2.
Thermal coagulation with adrenaline (epinephrine)
3.
Fibrin or thrombin with adrenaline (epinephrine)
Interventional radiology should be offered to unstable
patients who re-bleed after endoscopic treatment. Refer
urgently for surgery if interventional radiology is not
immediately available.
41.
42. INDICATIONS FOR
SURGERY
1.
Persistent hypotension
2.
Failure of medical treatment or endoscopic
homeostasis
3.
Coexisting condition ( perforation, obstruction,
malignancy)
4.
Transfusion requirement (4 units in 24 hr)
5.
Recurrent hospitalizations
43. TYPES OF OPERATIONS
The choice of operation depends on the site and
the bleeding lesions:
1.
Duodenal ulcers are treated by under-running
with or without pyloro-plasty.
2.
Gastric ulcers treated by under-running (take a
biopsy to exclude carcinoma).
3.
Local excision or partial gastrectomy will be
required.
44. COMPLICAT
IONS
Can arise from treatments administered for
example:
Endoscopy:
1.
2.
3.
Aspiration pneumonia
Perforation
Complications from coagulation, laser
treatments
Surgery:
1.
2.
3.
Ileus
Sepsis
Wound problems
45. PREVENTION
The most important factor to consider is
treatment for H. pylori infection.
1st line therapy PPT
( omeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole) +
two of these three AB
( clarithromycin, amoxicillin, metronidazole)
2nd line therapy
For 7 days
- PPT
- bismuth
- metronidazole
- tetracycline
46. : RESOURCES
1.
MacLeod's clinical examination 12th edition
2.
Davidson’s principle and practice of
medicine th21 edition
3.
Oxford handbook of emergency medicine
Upper GIT bleeding
http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor
4.
5. www.medscape.com
Notas do Editor
T he main aim of examination is to assess blood loss and look for signs of shock. A secondary aim is to look for signs of underlying disease and significant comorbid conditions - for example:
Where possible, having the patient's previous results is useful to gauge this loss.
Cardiac enzymes and ECG- An electrocardiogram (ECG) should be ordered to exclude arrhythmia and cardiac disease, especially acute myocardial infarction due to hypotension
It has been demonstrated that early and aggressive resuscitation reduces mortality in UGIB.
Is required when endoscopic techniques fail or are contra-indicated
Upper midline laparotomy
Identify point of bleeding
Under-run gastroduodenal artery
Salvage surgery for patients who continue to bleed is associated with a high mortality