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Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding

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Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding John C. Rabine, MD, FACG, AGAF Division of Gastroenterology Sinai Hospital of Baltimore Initial PEG Procedure Incision site ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding


1
Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding
  • John C. Rabine, MD, FACG, AGAF
  • Division of Gastroenterology
  • Sinai Hospital of Baltimore

2
Incidence of GI Bleeding
  • GI bleeding is the most common emergency in
    clinical gastroenterology
  • Upper GI bleeding alone accounts for over 300,000
    hospitalizations annually in the United States
  • In 90 of patients, the source of bleeding is in
    the esophagus, stomach or proximal small bowel
  • 9 in the colon and 1 in the small bowel beyond
    the proximal duodenum

(Soehendra et al., 2001)
3
Sources of Upper GI Bleeding
  • Mallory-Weiss tears
  • Gastric tumors
  • Varices
  • Esophagitis
  • Peptic ulcer disease
  • Dieulafoy lesions
  • Angioectasias
  • Small intestine diverticuli

4
Peptic Ulcer Disease
  • Most common source of UGI bleeding, accounting
    for 50-70 of non-variceal bleeds
  • Appoximately 15 rebleeding rate, requiring
    repeated endoscopy
  • Lifetime prevalence 5-10 (10-20 if H. Pylori
    )
  • 150 hospital admissions per 100,000 population
    per year
  • Overall mortality rate of 7 (unchanged over
    last 30 years)

5
Peptic Ulcer Disease
  • Gender Ratios
  • Gastric Ulcer M W
  • Duodenal Ulcer M gt W
  • Incidence increases with age
  • Incidence increased with certain diseases
  • COPD
  • cirrhosis
  • chronic renal failure

6
Peptic Ulcer DiseaseEtiologies
  • More Common
  • Helicobacter pylori
  • NSAIDs
  • Other drugs
  • KCl
  • bisphosphonates
  • Immunosuppressives
  • Idiopathic
  • Less Common
  • Other infections
  • CMV, TB, Syphilis, HSV1
  • Crohns disease
  • Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome
  • Systemic Mastocytosis
  • Malignancy
  • Lyphoma
  • Carcinoma
  • Radiation gastropathy

7
Peptic Ulcer DiseaseRole of NSAIDs
  • Impact of NSAIDs in the U.S.
  • 2 billion spent yearly on prescription NSAIDs
  • NSAID related ulcer complications cause
  • 107,000 patient hospitalizations yearly
  • 16,500 deaths yearly
  • 4-fold increased risk for ulcer
    complications in the elderly

8
Peptic Ulcer Disease
9
Hemorrhagic Gastritis (vs. Gastropathy)
10
Mallory-Weiss Tears
  • Linear, longitudinal tear at the GE junction
  • Account for 1-15 of cases of UGI bleeding
  • Associated with
    excessive retching
    and vomiting
  • Typical history
    absent in 1/3 of
    cases

11
Dieulafoy Lesions
  • Large bleeding artery that has eroded through the
    mucosa, unassociated with an ulcer
  • Severe hemorrhage, with mortality of 25 if
    lesion undiscovered
  • High rebleeding rates
  • 50 after
    single-modality

    therapy
  • 15 after
    combination

    therapy

12
GAVE Syndrome
13
Anastamotic Ulcer
14
Sources of Lower GI Bleeding
  • Colon polyps
  • Colon cancers
  • Diverticulosis
  • AVMs
  • Ileocolitis (IBD, ischemia, infection)
  • Varices (rectal, ileal)

15
Post-Polypectomy Bleeding
16
Treatment Options
  • Injection/Sclerotherapy
  • Thermal coagulation therapy
  • Endoscopic clipping
  • Argon plasma coagulation/APC
  • Endoscopic combination therapy
  • Miscellaneous tissue sealants, NdYAG laser,
    banding

Endoscopic Clips
Combination Therapy
Injection Therapy
Thermal Coagulation
17
Injection Therapy
  • Sclerotherapy Needles
  • Devices that pass through the working channel of
    the endoscope to inject sclerosing agents into
    the target tissue
  • Epinephrine, sodium morrhuate, saline, etc.
  • May be difficult
    to use in
    retroflexion

18
Electrocautery
19
Principles of Electrocautery
Monopolar grounding pad completes
circuit May interfere with AICD/pacemaker
function
  • Bipolar active return electrode
  • Energy can be applied tangentially from sides of
    probe

20
Electrocautery
21
Argon Plasma Coagulator
  • Utilizes alternating monopolar current conducted
    to target tissue through ionized argon gas
  • As no direct tissue contact, there is no
    tamponade effect and limited depth of burn

www.erbe-med.com/us
22
Endoscopic Clips
  • Mechanical clips are delivered through the
    endoscope
  • Hemostasis is achieved by mechanical compression
  • Can be used
    regardless of
    coagulation status

23
Quick Clip 2
  • Pre-loaded
  • Opens to 9.5mm between prongs
  • Rotating control mechanism for easy targeting
  • Once the clip is opened cannot be reopened and
    repositioned

24
TriClip
  • Pre-loaded
  • 3 pronged clip
  • Integrated port for flushing the field of view
  • Opens to 12mm between prongs
  • Once the clip is opened cannot be reopened and
    repositioned

25
Resolution Clip
  • Pre-Loaded
  • 11 mm-wide Jaw Opening
  • 155 and 235 cm lengths
  • Once the clip is opened can be opened up to 5
    times before deployment

26
Contraindications to Clipping
  • When hemostasis cannot be verified visually
    within endoscopic field of view
  • If MRI procedures are anticipated/necessary
  • Consider x-ray if clip placed within 2-4 weeks
  • Bleeding ulcers and arteries greater than 2 mm
  • Polyps greater than 1.5 cm in diameter
  • Mucosal/submucosal defects greater than 3 cm

27
Post-Polypectomy Bleeding
Video provided by Boston Scientific, Inc.
28
Endoscopic Band Ligation
  • Ligating device consists of a friction-fit
    adapter affixed to the tip of the endoscope with
    a preloaded elastic band and release
    mechanism
  • Effective in treating
    esophageal varices but can
    be used on other
    bleeding
    lesions as well
  • Coagulation status is not
    relevant

Video by Dr Peter Kelsey, Harvard Medical School.
DAVE Project, www.daveproject.org
29
PEG/PEJ Tubes
30
PEG/PEJ Indications
Oropharyngeal dysphagia CVA/stroke Parkinsons
disease ALS Laryngeal cancer Esophageal
dysphagia Radiation esophagitis Esophageal
cancer Malnutrition Dementia Severe pancreatitis
31
PEG Contraindications
  • Anticoagulation
  • Significant medical comorbidities
  • High-grade esophageal obstruction
  • Prior surgical interventions in LUQ
  • Inability to trans-illuminate and identify safe
    PEG position

32
PEG Tubes/Buttons
33
PEG-J Tubes
34
Initial PEG Procedure
  • Incision site selection and preparation
  • Endoscope introduced
  • Stomach insufflated
  • Abdominal wall trans-illuminated
  • Finger pressure applied at trans-illumination
    site and visually confirmed by endoscopist
  • Proposed site cleansed and anesthetized

Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
35
Initial PEG Procedure
  • Wire Placement
  • End of insertion wire passed through cannula into
    stomach

Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
36
Initial PEG Procedure
Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
37
Initial PEG Procedure
  • Post Tube Placement
  • PEG tube/catheter cut approximately 12 inches
    from the skin
  • External bolster is advanced down the PEG tube, 1
    cm from abdominal wall to avoid tissue
    compression
  • C-clamp and Y-port are then positioned on the PEG
    tube
  • Wound treated with triple antibiotic ointment and
    dressed with T cut 2 x 2 gauze pad over the
    external bolster

Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
38
PEG/PEJ Complications
  • Infection
  • Perforation
  • Aspiration pneumonia
  • Bleeding
  • Buried bumper syndrome and pressure ulcers
  • Tube migration, clogging, or degradation

39
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