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

Practice Questions: Upper GI bleeding

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 44-year-old woman presents with recurrent episodes of severe right upper quadrant pain after eating fatty foods. The pain radiates to her right shoulder and lasts several hours. What is the most likely diagnosis?

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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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