Week 3: GI bleeding Flashcards
1
Q
appearance of output from GI tract to localize bleeding and approximate rate
A
Upper GI: esophagus, stomach duodenum
middle GI: jejunum, ileum
lower GI: Colon
1. Hematemesis: brisk upper GI bleed
2. Melena: slower Upper GI bleed, or less commonly small bowel or right colon bleed
3. Hematochezia: colonic bleed or rapid upper GI or small bowel bleed
2
Q
High risk peptic ulcer bleeding
A
-endoscopic therapy combined with PPI inhibitors
3
Q
Variceal bleeding
A
- esophageal: can be treated by octreotide (somatostatin) and endoscopic ligation (or beta blocker for vasoconstriction, but it lowers bp)
- gastric varices more difficult to manage. TIPS is first line.
4
Q
Lower Gi bleeding
A
- diverticular bleeding and vascular ecstasies are most common. ischemic, radiation, infectious, inflammatory colitis are low volume bleeds. Hemorrhoids and fissure.
- therapeutic colonoscopy- controversial
- upper endoscopy to rule out upper GI bleed. Non emergent colonoscopy to confirm diagnosis.