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Upper GI Bleeding

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... PPI infusion, IV fluids, NBM Nursing Monitoring Prolonged hypotension ... ICU/Haematologist Urgent endoscopy Contact gastroenterologist on call ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Upper GI Bleeding


1
Upper GI Bleeding
  • Dr.Vimalan Ambikaipaker
  • Gastro Advanced trainee
  • JHH
  • blood and guts

2
Upper GIH
  • Potential life threatening problem
  • Upper GIT is 4times more common than Lower GIT
  • Most common course peptic ulcer
  • 80 stop bleeding
  • Increasing age and co-morbidity increases
    mortality
  • Important to indentify patients with low
    probability of re-bleeding from patients with a
    high probability of rebleeding.

3
Upper GI anatomy
4
Lower GI anatomy
5
Aetiology
  • Peptic ulcer disease 35-50
  • Duodenal ulcers 25
  • Gastric Ulcer 20
  • Gastroduodenal erosions 8-15
  • esophagitis 5-15
  • Esophageal varices 5-10
  • Malignancy 1
  • AVM 5

6
Aetiology - rare
  • Dieulafoys lesions
  • Angiodysplasia
  • Haemobilia
  • Pancreatic pseudocyst and pseudo aneursym
  • Bleeding diathesis
  • Ehlers-danlos syndrome
  • Gastric antral vascular ectasia
  • Rendu-osler-weber-syndrome
  • Pseudoxanthoma elasticum

7
NVUGIB Consensus Guidelines
  • A - Resuscitation, risk assessment and
    pre-endoscopy management
  • B - Endoscopic management
  • C Pharmacological management
  • D Non-endoscopic, non- meds in hospital
    treatment
  • E Medication review, ASA, Clopidrogel, warfarin
    dabigratan (Pradaxa) and NSAIDS.
  • F Discharge planning and Communication to GP
  • G Need for gastro liaison service to be involved

8
A - Resuscitation, risk assessment and
pre-endoscopy management
  • History taking
  • gtvomiting large amounts of red blood (active
    bleeding)
  • gtCoffee-ground vomitus (older-non active
    bleeding)
  • gt History melaena (black, tarry, smelly,
    difficulty to flush and iron tablets)
  • gtHaematochezia in rectum
  • ? Bowel obstruction
  • Weight lost, diffuse or localised abdominal,
    retching

9
History
  • Co- morbidity and risk factors
  • GERD, Peptic ulcers ,alcohol intake ,bleeding
    before
  • Liver cirrhosis
  • Liver malignancy
  • Haematological disease Low platelets, bleeding
    diathesis
  • Abdominal Aneurysm
  • Lung disease ,OSA, sedation issues

10
Medications
  • Aspirin
  • Clexane
  • Clopidrogel
  • Dabigratan (pradaxa)
  • Warfarin
  • NSAIDS
  • Steroids
  • Iron tablets and bismuth
  • Sedation issues opiods,Marijuana,Methadone

11
Examination
  • Vital signs
  • Signs of chronic liver disease
  • Decompensated liver disease
  • Acute abdomen
  • Encephalopathy
  • PR rectal examination

12
A - Resuscitation, risk assessment and
pre-endoscopy management
  • ABC
  • 2 IV lines
  • FBC,U/E, LFT, Coags, group and save/
    crossmatch,ECG
  • Need for FFP, Prothrombin X and platelets and
    correct coagulopathy(lt2.5)
  • IV fluid resuscitation
  • Blood transfusion (Hblt70)
  • Imaging CXR and AXR
  • IV PPI Infusion and consider OCTREOTIDE infusion
    if suspect varices bleed.
  • Reduce risk of aspiration , IV maxolon or IV
    erythromycin)
  • Aims- BP gt100mmHg,HRlt100bpm,HCTgt24,Plateletsgt50
  • Correct INR,? ICU/Haematologist
  • Urgent endoscopy
  • Contact gastroenterologist on call (Urgency made
    clearly to the consultant)

13
A - Resuscitation, risk assessment and
pre-endoscopy management
  • PPI Infusion
  • Before endoscopy, accelerate the resolution of
    endoscopic stigmata of bleeding ulcers and reduce
    the need for endoscopic therapy but should not
    delay endoscopy.
  • Does not result in improved clinical outcomes
    such as decrease transfusions, rebleeding,
    surgery or death.
  • PPI initiated after endoscopic diagnosis of
    peptic ulcer bleed significantly reduces
    rebleeding and surgery rates
  • Effects are more pronounced in Asian compared to
    with non-Asian populations
  • Continue IV infusion for 3days
  • Octreotide infusion
  • Reduces rebleeding rates similar to endoscopic
    sclerotherapy
  • Continue infusion for 5days

14
Risk assessment
  • Rockall Score
  • Factors Age,shock,C0-mobidity,Diagnosis
  • Major stigmata blood in GI tract, adherent
    clot, visible and spurting vessel
  • rebleeding
  • Longer stay in hospital
  • Rescoping
  • But always use clinical judgement

15
How to provoke homicidal rage in the
Gastroenterologist
  • Tell them the patient is haemodynamically
    stable
  • Dont tell them anything but fast the patient
    just in case
  • Insert a venous cannula of 24 gauge or less
  • Do not cross match
  • Start a PPI infusion without any plans for an
    endoscopy
  • Perform Faecal Occult Blood test
  • Dont call them early
  • Post endoscopy no blood or stool chart
    monitoring
  • Fail to identify rebleeding in post endoscopy
    patients
  • God gave you hands use the one finger though!!!

16
What to the gastroenterologist need to know
  • Accurate history
  • Co-morbidity
  • Medication and sedation issues
  • Physical examination and PR findings
  • Resuscitation Plan and monitoring plan
  • Retrieval plan
  • Discuss time for endoscopy or the need to be done
    in theatre
  • Booking of endoscopy unit and theatre nurse in
    charge is aware. Red slip!! and consent
  • Gastroenterologist needs to know early

17
B- Endoscopic management
  • Early endoscopy , within 24hrs
  • More urgent (vomiting bright red blood or
    haematochezia
  • Endoscopic hemostatic tx is not indicated for
    patients with low-risk stigmata (clean based
    ulcer, or a non-protuberant pigmented dot in an
    ulcer bed)
  • Finding of clot in ulcer bed warrants target
    irrigation an attempt dislodgement and with an
    appropriate treatment of underlying lesion
    (adrenaline with APC) or PPI might be enough.
  • Endoscopic hemostatic tx is indicated for
    patients with high-risk stigmata.
  • Combination epinephrine with either (APC, Clip
    or sclerosant injection)
  • If rebleed need second look
  • Need for surgical team involvement

18
Esophagus
19
Esophagus
20
Stomach
21
Duodenum
22
Video clip
23
Endoscopic haemostatic Treatment
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
Esophageal varices
27
Stomach Varices
28
Video clip
29
Video clip
30
(No Transcript)
31
D- non-endoscopic, non meds in hospital treatment
  • Rockall score lt3 with low risk of bleeding or
    death can be considered for early discharge.
  • Full Rockwall score gt3 indicates patients needs
    further close observation as an in patient.
    Careful monitoring needed post endoscopy
  • Need for re-endoscopy
  • If patient is at low-risk after endoscopy can be
    fed after 24hrs
  • If patient having undergone endoscopic
    haemostasis for high risk stigmata should be
    hospitalised for at least 72hrs thereafter
  • Bleeding peptic ulcer and duodenal ulcer should
    have testing for H. Pylori but not when acute
    bleeding. C14 urea breath test, serology- should
    receive eradication with confirmation of
    eradication(2weeks later)

32
E-Mediation review
  • In patients with prior ulcer bleed who require an
    NSAID, it should be recognized that treatment
    with traditional NSAID plus PPI or a COX-2 alone
    still associated with clinically important risk
    of bleeding
  • In patients with prior ulcer bleeding who require
    NSAID the combination of PPI and cox-2 is
    recommended to reduce the risk of recurrent
    bleeding from that of cox-2 alone.
  • Inpatients receiving low-dose ASA who develop an
    acute ulcer bleed, ASA should be started as soon
    as the risk of Cardiovascular complication is
    thought to outweigh the risk of bleeding.
  • In patients with a prior bleed who require CVA
    prophylaxis it should be recognized that
    clopidrogel alone has a higher risk of rebleeding
    vs ASA and PPI
  • A good discharge summary with follow-up plan.
    Discuss with GP before discharge. If plan for
    re-scoping dont forget RFA

33
Resident of the teamClinical Pearls
  • History, clinical exam, sedation issues and
    resuscitation
  • Please take note of the operative report
    (Endoscribe/ ProvationMD database)
  • Post-operative plan
  • High risk patients Potential rebleeding
  • Medication to be restarted/ withheld
  • Discharge planning and follow-up
  • Discharge summary Upper GIH
  • - Cause identified
    where is the lesion?
  • - Treatment, risk of
    rebleed,variceal banding
  • - medication update
  • - Further
    follow-up.
  • - Talk to the GP
    Ensure updated
  • medication list
    and H.pylori testing
  • Outstanding
    pathology results

34
In the last 12months
  • Inappropriate resuscitation PPI infusion, IV
    fluids, NBM
  • Nursing Monitoring Prolonged hypotension No
    review
  • Bright PR bleeding noted by family, nursing
    staff, medical RMO and Registrar aware but
    gastroenterologist not informed
  • ED noted Haematemesis and malaena but discharge
    home without endoscopy
  • Peripheral shutdown, difficult access, call made
    to ICU for cannula assistance. Metcall Vs consult
  • Delay in referral made to gastroenterologist for
    patient with HB 56!
  • No discussion with operation suite for add on
    emergency list
  • NO per-rectal examination- carried information
    from triage, patient, ED staff. PLEASE DO IT
    YOURSELF.

35
Summary
  • A good history and proper clinical examination
  • Per-rectal examination
  • Resuscitate the patient, risk assessment
  • Plan for endoscopy discussed with
    gastroenterologist
  • Medical registrar/AT to be aware of the patient
  • Most GIH will stop spontaneously
  • however, only endoscopy will identify which
    lesions will not
  • therefore
  • never assume that a lesion is controlled without
    endoscopy

36
Thank you
  • Course notes from the 4th Annual Westmead
    Endoscopy Symposium,3rd and 4th March 2011.
  • Dr.Gurvinder rull- Article on Upper GIH
  • Practical gastroenterology and Hepatology-
    Nicholas J.talley,Kemeth R.devault,David
    E.Fleischer
  • Prof. Aidan Foy slides.
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