UGI bleed Flashcards
Causes of UGI bleeds
Peptic ulcer disease (35-50%)
Mallory-Weiss tear (15%)
Gastroduodenal erosions (8-15%)
Oesophagitis (5-15%)
Oesophageal varices (5-10%)
Other (malignancy, AVM)
Dieulafoy lesion (1.5%; torturous gastric arteriole)
What classifies upper vs lower GI bleeds
Upper = before ligament of Treitz
Lower = after ligament of Treitz
Ligament of Treitz (suspends duodenal-jejunal flexure)
investigations for UGI bleed
FBC
U&Es
LFT
Glucose
Clotting screen
Crossmatch 4-6 units
Initial management for UGI bleed before knowing where the bleed is
- A-E assessment
- Resuscitation as appropriate
- IV fluids
- packed RBCs
- Active bleeding, count <50x10^9 → platelets
- Active bleeding +
→ FFP [PT/APTT >1.5x normal]
→ PCC [warfarin] - Risk assess
- Blatchford score (pre): Urea, Hb, SBP, other
- Rockall score (post): clinical bleeding + endoscopy results
- Consider ICU/HDU referral
- Catheterise and monitor urine output (aim >30ml/h)
- Monitor vital signs every 15 minutes until stable → hourly - Endoscopy: immediately after resus (emergency) or <24h
- Prophylaxis (variceal bleeding in portal HTN) PO propranolol (40mg, BD, PO)
- Pabrinex
Management for gastric variceal bleeds
Medical: terlipressin IV 5 days + antibiotics IV
First line: endoscopic injection of butyl cyanoacrylate
Second line: TIPS (Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt)
Management for oesophageal varices
Medical: terlipressin IV 5 days + antibiotics IV
First line: endoscopic band ligation
Second line: Sengstaken-Blakemore tube + TIPSS (Trans-jugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt; definitive management)
Management for non-variceal bleeds
Endoscopic:
- Mechanical clips ± adrenaline
- Thermal coagulation + adrenaline
- Fibrin/thrombin + adrenaline
PPI (only given once confirmed after endoscopy)