GI Bleed Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
Hematemesis
Frank bright red bloody vomit
Coffee ground emesis
Vomiting of digested blood
Ligament of treitz divides these 2 conditions
Upper GI vs lower GI bleed
HemOCCULT testing
Taking a sample of stool, placing it on a card that then undergoes reagant droplet testing, with blue color meaning that it contains blood
HemOCCULT positve with iron deficiency anemia vs negative with iron deficiency anemia protocol
+ requires EGD and colonoscopy
- just a colonoscopy
Heme+ stool with iron deficiency anemia with normal EGD/colonscopy protocol (4)
- Wireless capsule endoscopy (pill camera thanks big government)
- double balloon push enteroscopy
- repeat EGD/colonoscopy
- wait and observe
1 cause of upper GI bleed and 2 others
- peptic Ulcer disease (erosions of esophageal, stomach, or duodenum)
- mallory weiss tear (often in chronic coughers or violent vomiters)
- esophageal varices
Mallory weiss tear
Uncommon cause of upper GI bleed, longitudinal mucosal laceration at the gastroesophageal junction or the gastric cardia caused by forceful retching or vomiting, often associated with alcohol use, overt bleeding is minor and bleeding ceases spontaneously unless severe then need intervention
Bleeding varices
An uncommon cause of upper GI bleed due to friable weak tissue that usually resultes in sudden overt major bleeding, can be fatal
AIMS65 score
Predictor of in hospital mortality due to upper GI bleed based on risk factors
Albumin <3g/dL (produced by liver and keeps fluid in circulation)
INR greater than 1.5 (can’t spontaneously clot)
-Mental status <14 of glascow coma score
Systolic BP <90
Age greater than 65
Diverticular bleed #1 site
Ascending colon
Diverticular bleed does not necessarily mean a patient has…
…diverticulitis (this one is more common on the sigmoid colon on the left and is infectious while diverticular bleed is ascending colon most of time, and typically painless and stop spontaneously)
Lower GI sources of blood loss (5)
- diverticular bleed
- polyp/cancer
- angiodysplasia
- IBD
- hemorrhoid or fissure
Rare cause of lower GI bleed seen in patients with prior surgery of the abdomen
-erosion resulting in aortoenteric fistula resulting in a “herald bleed”
Postural hypotension
Supine to upright fall in systolic BP of >10mmHg or increase in heart rate of >20 bpm indicating a moderate blood loss (up to 20% of circulatory volume)