Upper GI Bleed

27
Upper GI Bleed James Peerless April 2011

description

Upper GI Bleed. James Peerless April 2011. Introduction. Incidence of 100/100 000 population per year (UK & USA) >80% occur as acute admissions ‘Hospital-acquired’ Critically ill patients Prolonged NG tube Drug Rx Associated with high rate of mortality and long ICU stay. Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Upper GI Bleed

Page 1: Upper GI Bleed

Upper GI Bleed

James PeerlessApril 2011

Page 2: Upper GI Bleed

Introduction

• Incidence of 100/100 000 population per year (UK & USA)

• >80% occur as acute admissions• ‘Hospital-acquired’– Critically ill patients– Prolonged NG tube– Drug Rx

• Associated with high rate of mortality and long ICU stay

Page 3: Upper GI Bleed

Objectives

• Definitions• Anatomy• Sources of Bleeding• Presentation• Assessment• Management

Page 4: Upper GI Bleed

DefinitionsUpper GI TractThe oral cavity, pharynx, oesophagus, stomach & proximal duodenum

HaematemesisThe act of vomitting blood; swallowed or that arisen from the bleeding within the upper GI tract

MelaenaBlack discoloured faeces due to the presence of partly-digested blood from the upper GI tract

Page 5: Upper GI Bleed

Anatomy

Hepatic a.

Left gastric a.

Right gastric a.Left gastro-epiploic a.

Right gastro-epiploic a.

Splenic a.

Coeliac trunk

Page 6: Upper GI Bleed

Azygous v.

L + R gastric vv.

Portal v.

Page 7: Upper GI Bleed

Causes

Page 8: Upper GI Bleed
Page 9: Upper GI Bleed

Varices

• Secondary to portal hypertension

• Dilated collateral veins formed at G-Oe junction

• These portosystemic anastomoses are superficial and prone to rupture

• High pressure veins in a hyperdynamic circulation

Page 10: Upper GI Bleed

Presentation

• Active bleeding• History of haematemesis• Melaena• Shock/hypotension/collapse• Anaemia

Page 11: Upper GI Bleed

Acute Management

Supportive

• Resuscitation– A B C

• History & Examination• Recruit help• Investigations• Continuous monitoring• Blood products• Correction of coagulopathy

Corrective

• Medical• Balloon tamponade• Endoscopy• Surgical

Page 12: Upper GI Bleed

Assessment

• Acute Assessment• History & Examination• Is the airway safe?• Is the patient at risk of further events?

Page 13: Upper GI Bleed

Identifying Risk

• Rockall Score

Page 14: Upper GI Bleed

Rockall Criteria

Page 15: Upper GI Bleed

Rockall Score0 1 2 3

Age <60 60-79 >80

Shock No shock HR >100 HR >100, SBP <100

Comorbidity Cardiac failure, ischaemic heart disease

Renal failure, liver failure, disseminated malignancy

Diagnosis Mallory Weiss, no lesion, no stigmata of recent haemorrhage

All other diagnoses

Malignancy of upper gastrointestinal tract

SRH (Endoscopy)

None, or dark spot

Fresh blood, adherent clot, visible or spurting vessel

Page 16: Upper GI Bleed

Mortality Rates0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8+

Total (%) 4.9 9.5 11.4 15.0 17.9 15.3 10.6 9.0 6.4

Re-bleed (%)

4.9 3.4 5.3 11.2 14.1 24.1 32.9 43.8 41.8

Death (non re-bleed) (%)

0 0 0.3 2.0 3.5 8.1 9.5 14.9 28.1

Death (re-bleed) (%)

0 0 0 10.0 15.8 22.9 33.3 43.4 52.5

Death (total) (%)

0 0 0.2 2.9 5.3 10.8 17.3 27.0 41.1

Rockall TA, Logan RF, Devlin HB, Northfield TC (1996) Risk assessment after acute upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Gut 38:316 – 21

Page 17: Upper GI Bleed

Scoring Systems

• Rockall Score• Forrest Classification– Active haemorrhage– Signs of recent haemorrhage– Lesions without active bleeding

• Glasgow-Blatchford Score– Scored on Hb, urea, BP,

presentation/comorbidities (no endoscopy)

Page 18: Upper GI Bleed

Management Pathway

Page 19: Upper GI Bleed

Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy

• Offers diagnostic information and opportunity for therapeutic intervention

• Scoping within 24 hours has a proven reduction in rebleed, mortality and length of admission

• For ulcers:– Adrenaline injection (temporary efect)– Diathermy/haemocoagulation– Endocscopic clips

Page 20: Upper GI Bleed

Variceal Bleeding

• Endoscopy is the definitive treatment of choice for variceal bleed

Page 21: Upper GI Bleed

Drugs & Secondary MX

Page 22: Upper GI Bleed

Sengstaken-Blakemore Tube

Page 23: Upper GI Bleed

Sengstaken-Blakemore Tube

Page 24: Upper GI Bleed

Linton-Nachlas Tube

Page 25: Upper GI Bleed

TIPSS

• Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt• Radiologically guided stent– Drilled through the liver and connects the portal

and hepatic vein• Available in specialised units• Complications– Thrombosis (10%)– Bleeding– Infarction

Page 26: Upper GI Bleed

Summary

• Hidden clinical picture• Supportive and Corrective Management• Endoscopic therapy mainstay of treatment• Risk of rebleeding remains high – keep

monitoring the patient!

Page 27: Upper GI Bleed

The End