Upper gastrointestinal bleed
From IDWiki
Etiology
- Bleeding peptic ulcer
- Duodenal ulcer (20-30%)
- Gastric ulcer (10-20%)
- Gastric or duodenal erosion (20-30%)
- Bleeding esophageal varices (15-20%)
- Other
- Mallory-Weiss tear (5-10%)
- Erosive esophagitis (5-10%)
- Angioma (5-10%)
- Arteriovenous malformation (<5%)
- Very rare
Clinical Manifestations
History
- Hematemesis
- Melena stools
- Nausea, abdominal pain
Signs & Symptoms
- Hematemesis
- Melena stools (50-100mL blood loss)
- Hematochezia (500-1000mL blood loss)
- Signs of hypovolemia or shock
- Signs of liver disease and portal hypertension, if variceal bleed
Risk Stratification
- Rockall score (requires endoscopy)
- Blatchford score
- >12 suggests need for endoscopy
- Forrest classification of ulcers on endoscopy
- 1a active spurting and 1b oozing have a 55% rebleed rate
- 2a visible vessel and 2b adherent clot
- 3 flat spot or clean-based ulcer
Investigations
- Other
- FOBT + with 10-20mL blood loss in UGIB (0.5mL in LGIB)
- Upper endoscopy within 24 hours
Management
- Fluid resuscitation
- Transfuse pRBC to maintain hemoglobin over 70
- Bleeding ulcer
- Pantoprazole 80 mg IV bolus then 8mg/h IV infusion x72h
- Reduces rebleeding of ulcers but not mortality
- Alternate: Pantoprazole 40 mg IV bid x72h
- Step down to oral therapy bid x28d then to once daily
- OGD within 24 hours
- Pantoprazole 80 mg IV bolus then 8mg/h IV infusion x72h
- Variceal bleed
- Ceftriaxone 1 g IV daily for 7 days
- Octreotide 50 mcg IV bolus then 50mcg/h IV infusion
- If bleeding continues, Blakemore tube (deflate within 12h for OGD)
- OGD within 12h
- For both, endoscopy within 24h if Blatchford score >12 (urgent endoscopy not required)