Upper GI bleeding

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Quick Overview

Upper GI bleeding (UGIB) is defined as haemorrhage proximal to the ligament of Treitz. Annual incidence: 50-150/100,000, with 10-14% mortality. NICE NG158 emphasizes risk stratification (Glasgow-Blatchford Score pre-endoscopy, Rockall post-endoscopy), immediate resuscitation, and timing of endoscopy based on risk. Variceal vs non-variceal bleeding requires distinct management pathways.

Core Facts & Concepts

Risk Stratification Systems:

ScoreTimingVariablesUse
Glasgow-Blatchford (GBS)Pre-endoscopyUrea, Hb, BP, pulse, melaena, syncope, hepatic/cardiac diseaseScore ≥1: needs intervention; Score 0: safe for outpatient
RockallPost-endoscopyAge, shock, comorbidity, diagnosis, stigmata of bleedingPredicts rebleeding/mortality

Key Numbers:

  • 🩸 Transfusion threshold: Hb <70 g/L (restrictive strategy); consider <100 g/L if acute coronary syndrome
  • 📊 GBS = 0: 0.5% risk of intervention/death; safe for discharge
  • ⏱️ Endoscopy timing: <24h unstable patients; within 24h for all others (NICE NG158)
  • 🚩 Massive bleed: >30% blood volume loss or ongoing haemodynamic instability

Figure 1: Endoscopy showing spurting arterial blood from gastric ulcer with visible vessel

Initial Management (NICE NG158):

  • ABC approach: 2× large-bore IV cannulae (16G)
  • Crystalloid resuscitation (target systolic BP >100 mmHg)
  • Tranexamic acid: Consider within 3h of bleeding onset
  • Cross-match 4-6 units; activate major haemorrhage protocol if needed
  • NBM status for endoscopy

Problem-Solving Approach

Immediate Assessment (First 15 minutes):

  1. Haemodynamic stability: Pulse, BP, capillary refill, urine output
  2. Calculate GBS: Determines admission vs discharge
  3. Bloods: FBC, U&E (urea:creatinine ratio >100 suggests UGIB), coagulation, LFTs, group & save/cross-match
  4. Stigmata of chronic liver disease: Spider naevi, ascites, jaundice → suspect varices
  5. Drug history: NSAIDs, anticoagulants, antiplatelets, SSRIs

Figure 2: Endoscopy showing oesophageal varices with red whale markings

🚩 Red Flags for Immediate Endoscopy (<24h):

  • Haemodynamic instability despite resuscitation
  • GBS ≥12
  • Suspected variceal bleeding
  • Inpatient with active bleeding

Variceal vs Non-Variceal Pathway:

VARICEAL (suspect if chronic liver disease):

  • Terlipressin 2mg IV bolus, then 1-2mg/4-6h for 5 days
  • Prophylactic antibiotics: Ceftriaxone 1g IV daily (reduces infection/mortality by 20%)
  • Urgent endoscopy: variceal band ligation (first-line) or sclerotherapy
  • Sengstaken-Blakemore tube: temporary bridge if uncontrolled

NON-VARICEAL:

  • PPI therapy: High-dose IV (e.g., omeprazole 80mg bolus, then 8mg/h infusion) post-endoscopy for high-risk lesions
  • Endoscopic therapy: adrenaline injection + thermal coagulation/clips for Forrest Ia/Ib/IIa lesions

Analysis Framework

Forrest Classification (Peptic Ulcer Bleeding):

GradeDescriptionRebleed RiskEndoscopic Treatment
IaSpurting arterial bleed90%Yes - dual therapy
IbOozing bleeding50%Yes - dual therapy
IIaVisible vessel40%Yes - dual therapy
IIbAdherent clot20%Consider therapy
IIcHaematin base5%No
IIIClean ulcer base3%No

Differential Diagnosis by Presentation:

  • Haematemesis (fresh blood): Oesophageal/gastric source, rapid bleeding
  • Coffee-ground vomit: Slower gastric bleeding, acid exposure
  • Melaena alone: Duodenal/small bowel (sticky, black, offensive stool)

Visual Aid

Transfusion Strategy (NICE NG158):

Clinical ContextThresholdTarget
StandardHb <70 g/L70-90 g/L
ACS/significant CVDHb <100 g/L100 g/L
Ongoing bleedingClinical judgmentMaintain perfusion

Key Points Summary

GBS = 0: Safe for outpatient management; GBS ≥1 requires admission (NICE NG158)

Transfusion: Restrictive strategy (Hb <70 g/L) reduces mortality vs liberal approach

Variceal bleeding: Terlipressin + prophylactic antibiotics (ceftriaxone) + urgent endoscopy with banding

High-dose PPI: Only indicated post-endoscopy for high-risk non-variceal lesions (Forrest Ia-IIa)

Endoscopy timing: <24h if unstable/high-risk; within 24h for all admitted patients

Dual endoscopic therapy: Adrenaline injection PLUS mechanical/thermal method for active bleeding/visible vessel

Anticoagulant management: Reverse if life-threatening; balance thrombotic vs bleeding risk with haematology input

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Practice Questions: Upper GI bleeding

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A 38-year-old woman presents with recurrent episodes of severe abdominal pain and psychiatric symptoms. Her urine turns dark during attacks. Family history reveals similar episodes. What is the inheritance pattern?

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Flashcards: Upper GI bleeding

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A plain abdominal X ray for Hirschsprungs Disease will demonstrate _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

A plain abdominal X ray for Hirschsprungs Disease will demonstrate _____

dilated loops of bowel with fluid levels

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