Title: Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding
1Endoscopic Management of GI Bleeding
- John C. Rabine, MD, FACG, AGAF
- Division of Gastroenterology
- Sinai Hospital of Baltimore
2Incidence 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)
3Sources of Upper GI Bleeding
- Mallory-Weiss tears
- Gastric tumors
- Varices
- Esophagitis
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Dieulafoy lesions
- Angioectasias
- Small intestine diverticuli
4Peptic 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)
5Peptic 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
6Peptic 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
7Peptic 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
8Peptic Ulcer Disease
9Hemorrhagic Gastritis (vs. Gastropathy)
10Mallory-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
11Dieulafoy 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
12GAVE Syndrome
13Anastamotic Ulcer
14Sources of Lower GI Bleeding
- Colon polyps
- Colon cancers
- Diverticulosis
- AVMs
- Ileocolitis (IBD, ischemia, infection)
- Varices (rectal, ileal)
15Post-Polypectomy Bleeding
16Treatment 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
17Injection 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
18Electrocautery
19Principles 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
20Electrocautery
21Argon 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
22Endoscopic Clips
- Mechanical clips are delivered through the
endoscope - Hemostasis is achieved by mechanical compression
- Can be used
regardless of
coagulation status
23Quick 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
24TriClip
- 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
25Resolution 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
26Contraindications 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
27Post-Polypectomy Bleeding
Video provided by Boston Scientific, Inc.
28Endoscopic 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
29PEG/PEJ Tubes
30PEG/PEJ Indications
Oropharyngeal dysphagia CVA/stroke Parkinsons
disease ALS Laryngeal cancer Esophageal
dysphagia Radiation esophagitis Esophageal
cancer Malnutrition Dementia Severe pancreatitis
31PEG Contraindications
- Anticoagulation
- Significant medical comorbidities
- High-grade esophageal obstruction
- Prior surgical interventions in LUQ
- Inability to trans-illuminate and identify safe
PEG position
32PEG Tubes/Buttons
33PEG-J Tubes
34Initial 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.
35Initial PEG Procedure
- Wire Placement
- End of insertion wire passed through cannula into
stomach
Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
36Initial PEG Procedure
Permission by Boston Scientific, Inc.
37Initial 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.
38PEG/PEJ Complications
- Infection
- Perforation
- Aspiration pneumonia
- Bleeding
- Buried bumper syndrome and pressure ulcers
- Tube migration, clogging, or degradation
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