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Definition
arising from the esophagus, stomach, or proximal duodenum |
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arising from distal duodenum to ileocecal valve |
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Definition
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Definition
• Occult blood in stool • Does not provide any localizing information • Indicates slow pace, usually low volume bleeding |
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Definition
• Very dark, tarry, pungent stool • Usually suggestive of UGI origin (but can be small intestinal, proximal colon origin if slow pace) |
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Definition
• Spectrum: bright red blood, dark red, maroon • Usually suggestive of colonic origin (but can be UGI origin if brisk pace/large volume) |
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How sick is this patient? (risk stratification) • Determines |
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Definition
disposition • Guides resuscitation • Guides decision re: need for/timing of endoscopy |
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Differential Diagnosis—Upper GIB |
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Definition
• Peptic ulcer disease (most common) • Gastroesophageal varices (most common) • Erosive esophagitis/gastritis/duodenitis (most common) • Mallory Weiss tear • Vascular ectasia • Neoplasm • Dieulafoy’s lesion • Aortoenteric fistula • Hemobilia, hemosuccus pancreaticus |
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Differential Diagnosis—Lower GIB |
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Definition
• Diverticulosis (most common) • Angioectasias • Hemorrhoids • Colitis (IBD, infectious, ischemic) • Neoplasm • Post-polypectomy bleed (up to 2 weeks after procedure) • Dieulafoy’s lesion |
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Definition
• Localizing symptoms • History of prior GIB • NSAID/aspirin use • Liver disease/cirrhosis • Vascular disease • Aortic valvular disease, chronic renal failure • AAA repair • Radiation exposure • Family history of GIB |
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Definition
• Vital signs, orthostatics • Abdominal tenderness • Skin, oral examination • Stigmata of liver disease • Rectal examination - Objective description of stool/blood - Assess for mass, hemorrhoids - No need for guaiac test |
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Definition
Always get objective description of stool Avoid non-informative terms such as “grossly guaiac positive” If you need a card to tell you whether there’s blood in the stool, it’s not an acute GIB |
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Predictors of UGI source: |
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Definition
• Age <50 • Melenic stool • BUN/creatinine ratio - If ratio ≥ 30, think upper GIB |
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Definition
- Most useful situation: patients with severe hematochezia, and unsure if UGIB vs. LGIB • Positive aspirate (blood/coffee grounds) indicates UGIB - Can provide prognostic info: • Red blood per NGT—predictive of high risk endoscopic lesion • Coffee grounds—less severe/inactive bleeding - Negative aspirate—not as helpful • 15–20% of patients with UGIB have negative NG aspirate |
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even if NG aspirate negative |
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Definition
Upper GI bleed must still be considered in patients with severe hematochezia |
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GI bleeding classifications |
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Definition
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Definition
IV access: large bore peripheral IVs best • Use crystalloids first - Anticipate need for blood transfusion • Threshold should be based on underlying condition, hemodynamic status, markers of tissue hypoxia • Should be administered if Hgb ≤ 7 g/dL • 1 U PRBC should raise Hgb by 1 (HCT by 3%) • Remember that initial Hct can be misleading (Hct remains the same with loss of whole blood, until reequilibration occurs) -Correct coagulopathy |
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restrictive vs liberal transfusions |
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Definition
restrictive has better outcomes |
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Definition
Weigh risks and benefits of reversing anticoagulation Assess degree of coagulopathy Vitamin K—slow acting, long-lived FFP- fast acting, short lived, give 1 U FFP for every 4 U PRBCs |
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Causes of Mortality in Patients with Peptic Ulcer Bleeding |
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Definition
• Patients rarely bleed to death • Prospective cohort study >10,000 cases of peptic ulcer bleed • Mortality rate 6.2% • 80% of deaths not related to bleeding |
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Causes of Mortality in Patients with Peptic Ulcer Bleeding |
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Definition
• Terminal malignancy (34%) • Multi-organ failure (24%) • Pulmonary disease (24%) • Cardiac disease (14%) |
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to reduce mortality from UGIB |
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Definition
Early resuscitation and supportive measures are critical |
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Definition
• Identify patients at high risk for adverse outcomes • Helps determine disposition (ICU vs. floor vs. outpatient) • May help guide appropriate timing of endoscopy |
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Definition
• Predicts need for endoscopic therapy • Based on readily available clinical and lab data • Can use UpToDate calculator [image] • Most useful for safely discriminating low risk UGIB patients who will likely not require endoscopic hemostasis • “Fast track Blatchford”—patient at low risk if: BUN < 18 mg/dL Hgb > 13 (men), 12 (women) SBP >100 HR < 100 |
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Pre-endoscopic Pharmacotherapy |
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Definition
• For non-variceal UGIB - IV PPI: 80 mg bolus, 8 mg/hr drip - Rationale: suppress acid, facilitate clot formation, and stabilization - Duration: at least until EGD, then based on findings • Reduces the proportion of patients with high risk endoscopic stigmata (“downstages” lesion) • Decreases need for endoscopic therapy • Has not been shown to reduce rebleeding, surgery, or mortality rates
Endoscopic treatment required: Omeprazole—19% (23% of PUD) Placebo—28% (37% of PUD) |
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Endoscopy—Non-variceal UGIB |
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Definition
• Early endoscopy (within 24 hours) is recommended for most patients with acute UGIB • Achieves prompt diagnosis, provides risk stratification, and hemostasis therapy in high-risk patients |
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When is Endoscopic Therapy Required? |
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Definition
• ~80% bleeds spontaneously resolve • Endoscopic stigmata of recent hemorrhage
Active bleeding 55–90% Non-bleeding visible vessel 40–50% Adherent clot Variable, depending on underlying lesion: 0–35% Flat pigmented spot 7–10% Clean base < 5% |
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Term
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Definition
• Role of endoscopic therapy of ulcers with adherent clot is controversial • Clot removal usually attempted • Underlying lesion can then be assessed, treated if necessary |
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Definition
-Flat pigmented spot -Clean base
Low re-bleeding risk— no endoscopic therapy needed |
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Endoscopic Hemostasis Therapy |
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Definition
• Epinephrine injection • Thermal electrocoagulation • Mechanical (hemoclips) • Combination therapy superior to monotherapy |
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Non-variceal UGIB— Post-endoscopy Management |
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Definition
• Patients with low-risk ulcers can be fed promptly, put on oral PPI therapy. • Patients with ulcers requiring endoscopic therapy should receive PPI gtt x 72 hours. - Significantly reduces 30-day re-bleeding rate vs. placebo (6.7% vs. 22.5%) - Note: there may not be major advantage with high dose over non-high dose PPI therapy • Determine H. pylori status in all ulcer patients • Discharge patients on PPI (once to twice daily), duration dictated by underlying etiology and need for NSAIDs/aspirin • In patients with cardiovascular disease on low dose aspirin: restart as soon as bleeding has resolved - RCT demonstrates increased risk of re-bleeding (10% vs. 5%) but decreased 30-day mortality (1.3% vs. 13%) -Not dying is more important than not re-bleeding |
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Definition
• Occurs in 1/3 of patients with cirrhosis • 1/3 initial bleeding episodes are fatal • Among survivors, 1/3 will re-bleed within 6 weeks • Only 1/3 will survive - 1 year or more |
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Term
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Definition
• Vasoconstrictor therapy • Antibiotics • Resuscitation • ICU-level care • Endoscopy • ALternative/rescue therapy • Beta blockers |
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Term
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Definition
• Goal: reduce splanchnic blood flow • Vasopressin plus nitroglycerine—too many adverse effects • Octreotide (somatostatin analogue) - Decreases splanchnic blood flow (variably) - Efficacy is controversial; no proven mortality benefit - Standard dose: 50 mcg bolus, then 50 mcg/hr drip for 3–5 days |
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Term
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Definition
• Bacterial infection occurs in up to 66% of patients with cirrhosis and variceal bleed • Negative impact on hemostasis (endogenous heparinoids) • Prophylactic antibiotics reduce incidence of bacterial infection, significantly reduces early re-bleeding - Ceftriaxone 1 g IV QD x 5–7 days - Alt: Norfloxacin 400 mg po BID |
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Term
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Definition
• Promptly but with caution • Goal is to maintain hemodynamic stability - Maintain Hgb ~7-8, CVP 4–8 mmHg • Avoid excessively rapid overexpansion of volume; may increase portal pressure, greater bleeding |
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Term
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Definition
• Should be performed as soon as possible after resuscitation (within 12 hours) • Endotracheal intubation frequently needed • Band ligation is preferred method |
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ALternative/Rescue Therapies |
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Definition
• TIPS—transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt • Early placement of shunt (within 24–72hrs) associated with improved survival among high-risk patients • Preferred treatment for gastric variceal bleeding (rule out splenic vein thrombosis first) |
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ALternative/Rescue Therapies Sengstaken-Blakemore Tube |
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Definition
• Very effective for immediate, temporary control • High complication rate— aspiration, migration, necrosis plus perforation of esophagus • Use as bridge to TIPS within 24 hours • Airway protection strongly recommended |
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ALternative/Rescue Therapies Self-Expanding Metal Stent |
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Definition
• Specially designed covered metal stent • Tamponades distal esophageal varices • Removable; does not require airway protection • Very limited data |
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Definition
• Reduces risk for recurrent variceal hemorrhage • Use nonselective beta blocker (e.g., Nadolol—splanchnic vasoconstriction, decrease cardiac output) and titrate up to maximum tolerated dose, HR 50–60 - Start as inpatient, once acute bleeding has resolved and patient shows hemodynamic stability |
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Term
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Definition
• Bleeding arising from the colon-rectum • In patients with severe hematochezia, first consider possibility of UGIB - 10–15% of patients with presumed LGIB are found to have upper GIB |
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Lower GI Bleed Differential Diagnosis |
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Definition
• Diverticulosis (number 1 cause) (large volume, painless) • Angioectasias • Hemorrhoids • Colitis (IBD, infectious, ischemic) (smaller volume, pain, diarrhea) • Neoplasm • Post-polypectomy • Dieulafoy’s lesion |
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Predictors of severe* LGIB: |
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Definition
• HR>100 • SBP<115 • Syncope • Non-tender abdominal examination • Bleeding during first 4 hours of evaluation • Aspirin use • >2 active comorbid conditions 0 factors: ~6% risk 1–3 factors: ~40% >3 factors: ~80% |
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LGIB—Risk Factors for Mortality |
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Definition
• Age • Intestinal ischemia • Comorbid illnesses • Secondary bleeding (developed during admission for a separate problem) • Coagulopathy • Hypovolemia • Transfusion requirement • Male gender |
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Term
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Definition
- Like UGIB, ~80% of LGIBs will resolve spontaneously; of these, ~30% will re-bleed - Lack of standardized approach • Traditional approach • Elective colonoscopy after resolution of bleeding, bowel prep —low therapeutic benefit • Angiography for massive bleeding, hemodynamically unstable patient • Urgent colonoscopy approach • Similar to UGIB—identify stigmata of hemorrhage, perform therapy |
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Term
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Definition
• Within 6–12 hours of presentation • Requires rapid “purge” prep with 5–6 L Golytely administered 1L every 30–45 minutes • Colonoscopy performed within 1 hour after clearance of stool, blood, and clots • Need for bowel prep and risks of procedural sedation may be prohibitive in unstable patient |
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Radiographic Studies Angiography |
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Definition
• Detects bleeding rates of 0.5–1 ml/min • Therapeutic capability— embolization with microcoils, polyvinyl alcohol, gelfoam • Complications: bowel infarction, renal failure, hematomas, thromboses, dissection
Recommended test for patients with brisk bleeding who cannot be stabilized or prepped for colonoscopy (or have had colonoscopy with failure to localize/treat bleeding site) |
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Radiographic Studies Multi-Detector CT (CT angio) |
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Definition
• Readily available, can be performed in ER within 10 minutes • Can detect bleeding rate of 0.5 ml/min • Can localize site of bleeding (must be active) and provide info on etiology • Useful in the actively bleeding but hemodynamically stable patient |
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Term
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Definition
• Reserved for patients with life-threatening bleed who have failed other options • General indications -Hypotension/shock despite resuscitation - >6 U PRBCs transfused • Preoperative localization of bleeding source important |
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Algorithmic Evaluation of Patient With Hematochezia |
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Definition
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Take Home Points for all of GIB |
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Definition
• Always get objective description of stool color (best way—examine it yourself) • Don’t order guaiac tests on inpatients • Severe hematochezia can be from UGIB, even if NG lavage is negative • All bleeding eventually stops (and majority of non-variceal bleeds will stop spontaneously, with the patient alive) • Early resuscitation and supportive care are key to reducing morbidity and mortality from GIB |
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