5. Haematemesis Flashcards
What does each component of the A to E response stand for?
Airway, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure
What are the main differentials for haematemesis?
Oesophagitis, bleeding peptic ulcer, oesophageal varices
Less common causes- mallory weiss tear, oesophageal cancer, gastric cancer, arteriovenous malformations
What are the blatchford and rockall scores?
Blatchford- stratifies patients presenting to hospital with haematemesis
Rockall- predicts the risk of rebleeding and mortality
What questions should you ask about the presenting complaint in a patient with haematemesis?
How much blood? What was the character of the vomit? Any blood in the stool? Did vomiting trigger the haematemesis? Any recent weight loss or problems swallowing? Any signs of liver failure Any epigastric pain?
What features in PMHx are important in a patient with haematemesis?
Previous upper GI haemorrhage, heartburn or epigastric pain, any history of GORD, any aortic repair with grafts (aorto enteric fistula), bleeding tendency, chronic liver disease
What drugs are important to ask about in a patient with haematemesis?
Anticoagulants, regular NSAIDs, aspirin, clopidogrel, steroids or bisphosphonates
Drugs causing liver toxicity- methotrexate, amiodarone
What are signs of liver disease?
jaundice, scratch marks, bruising, spider naevi, palmar erythema, dupuytren’s contracture, gynaecomastia, ascites, ankle oedema, caput medusa