Gastrointestinal Bleeding

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GIB: Overview & Initial Rx - Spotting the Source

  • Types: UGIB (proximal to Lig. of Treitz), LGIB (distal). Overt (visible) vs. Occult (FOBT+).
  • Initial Rx (ABCDE):
    • Assess hemodynamics (Shock Index: $HR/SBP$ > 0.9 indicates shock).
    • Secure airway; 2 large-bore IV cannulas.
    • Fluid resuscitation: Crystalloids. Blood if Hb < 7 g/dL (or < 9 g/dL in CAD).
    • Correct coagulopathy (FFP, Vit K).
  • Spotting Source:
    • History (NSAIDs, EtOH), exam.
    • NG lavage (UGIB), proctoscopy (fresh PR bleed).
    • Endoscopy: EGD for UGIB, Colonoscopy for LGIB. Ligament of Treitz and GI Tract Anatomy

⭐ Most common cause of significant UGIB is peptic ulcer disease.

UGIB: Causes & Management - Above Treitz Terrors

Bleeding proximal to Ligament of Treitz.

Causes:

  • Non-Variceal (80%): PUD (H. pylori, NSAIDs), Mallory-Weiss, Erosions, Dieulafoy's.
  • Variceal (20%): Esophageal/Gastric varices (portal HTN). 📌 Causes: Mallory, Esophagitis, Dieulafoy, Inflammation (gastritis), Cancer, Ulcer, Varices. (MEDIC UV)

Management:

  • Resuscitation: ABCs, IV fluids, blood (Hb < 7 g/dL). PPI (non-variceal), Octreotide + Abx (variceal).
  • Risk Stratify: Glasgow-Blatchford (GBS > 0 high risk), Rockall.
  • Endoscopy (OGD): Within 24h. Diagnose & treat.
    • Non-variceal: Forrest class. Clips, thermal, adrenaline.
    • Variceal: Banding, sclerotherapy.
  • Post-Endo: PPI, H. pylori eradication. beta-blockers (varices). TIPS if refractory.

Endoscopic views of non-variceal UGI bleeding lesions

⭐ Forrest Ia (spurting arterial bleed) has ~55% rebleed risk without endoscopic therapy.

LGIB: Causes & Management - Below Treitz Troubles

  • Bleeding distal to Ligament of Treitz.
  • Common Causes:
    • Diverticulosis: Most common cause of massive LGIB; typically painless, arterial bleed.
    • Angiodysplasia: Vascular ectasias, common in elderly, right colon; often occult or recurrent.
    • Colitis: IBD, ischemic, infectious; usually associated with pain, bloody diarrhea.
    • Neoplasms/Polyps: Can cause chronic occult or acute frank bleeding.
    • Anorectal: Hemorrhoids, fissures; bright red blood on toilet paper (BRBPR).
  • Diagnosis:
    • Initial: Exclude UGIB if suspected.
    • Stable patients: Colonoscopy (diagnostic & therapeutic).
    • Active/Massive bleed: CTA (preferred if bleed >0.3-0.5 mL/min) or Tagged RBC scan (detects bleed >0.1-0.5 mL/min).
  • Management:
    • Resuscitation: ABCs, 2 large-bore IV lines, fluids, blood products.
    • Therapeutic Colonoscopy: Clips, thermal coagulation, epinephrine injection.
    • Angiographic embolization: For active bleeding identified on CTA/RBC scan.
    • Surgery: Segmental resection or subtotal colectomy for refractory/unlocalized severe bleeding.

⭐ Diverticulosis is the most common cause of major LGIB. Bleeding stops spontaneously in ~80% of cases, but recurrence is common (20-40%).

OGIB & Small Bowel - Elusive Escapes

  • Obscure GI Bleed (OGIB): Persistent/recurrent bleeding despite negative UGI endoscopy & colonoscopy.
    • Overt: Melena, hematochezia.
    • Occult: FOBT positive, iron deficiency anemia.
  • Small bowel is the source in ~75% of OGIB cases.
  • Key Investigations:
    • Video Capsule Endoscopy (VCE): First-line for suspected small bowel source.

      ⭐ VCE boasts the highest diagnostic yield for detecting small bowel bleeding causes.

    • Device-Assisted Enteroscopy (DAE): For diagnosis & intervention.
    • CT/MR Enterography; Angiography for active bleed.
  • Common Causes: Angiodysplasia (most common), tumors, NSAID enteropathy, Crohn's. Small bowel angiodysplasia on capsule endoscopy

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • UGIB is more common; LGIB often from diverticulosis or angiodysplasia.
  • Peptic ulcer disease is the leading cause of UGIB.
  • Initial management for severe bleeding: Resuscitation (fluids, blood products).
  • Early endoscopy (within 24h) is key for UGIB diagnosis & therapy.
  • Rockall and Glasgow-Blatchford scores assess risk in UGIB.
  • Variceal bleeds: manage with octreotide, antibiotics, & EVL.
  • Massive LGIB may need angiography/embolization or surgery.

Practice Questions: Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following is the most likely cause of bright red blood per rectum (hematochezia) in a 70-year-old patient?

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Flashcards: Gastrointestinal Bleeding

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The tube used for performing gastric lavage is an _____ tube.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The tube used for performing gastric lavage is an _____ tube.

Ewald

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