Title: Upper GI Bleed:
1Upper GI Bleed Clinical Case Presentation
Lisa Philipose 4 / 25/ 06
2History
- CC 79 y.o. white male presents via EMS to the
Bayview E.D. with two days of loose black tarry
stools. - HPI On the morning PTA, patient felt weak and
light-headed, so wife called EMS. VS in the
field were HR136 BP 82/48 RR18 O2sat 98
on RA D-stick150. - 600 cc bolus was administered by EMS and BP
increased to 107/61 and HR decreased to 96.
3History
- ROS Pt denies N/V/D/C, and denies
chest/abdominal/ back/flank/rectal pain. - PMH HTN, DM, no h/o bleeding d/o no h/o GI
disorders - Last colonoscopy 3 yrs ago reported normal per
patient. - PSH None
- Meds Lisinopril, Metformin, Glucophage, HCTZ,
ASA - All NKDA
- SH No h/o tobacco/alcohol/illicits
4Physical
- Vital Signs
- T 98.8 HR 104 RR 18 BP 127/89 O2 Sat 98,
RA - Gen Pale, smiling, NAD
- HEENT Moist mucus membranes
- Lungs CTAB
- CV RRR, no M/R/G
- Abdomen Nontender, nondistended, BS
- Rectal Grossly heme positive with black tarry
foul smelling stool, one small external
hemorrhoid-not ruptured, inflamed, or bleeding - Extremities No swelling/tenderness, 2DP pulses
- Neuro Alert and oriented, nonfocal
5E.D. course
- Two large bore IVs in place- 1L NS bolus followed
by NS infusion - Patient placed on O2 and cardiac monitor.
- EKG Normal sinus rhythm
- Hemocue 8.9 g/dl
- Labs sent CBC (hgb9.4), CMP, TS, coags,
cardiac enzymes - CXR normal. No free air under diaphragm
- Rectal exam grossly positive
- NG lavage 300 cc clear output?NG d/c
- Protonix 40mg IV
6E.D. course
- Orthostatics
- Lying(77, 132/77)
- Sitting (73,120/70)
- Standing (95,114/62) pt reports
lightheadedness - Repeat CBC (hgb8.4) and CE
- 1 unit PRBCs given
- VS stable
- Pt admitted for observation and inpatient
endoscopy - GI team aware
7Laboratory Data
WBC 9310 w/ nl diff Hgb9.4?8.4 Hct
26.5?24 Platelets226 Coags normal Blood Type
A CE X 2 negative UA normal
Na 135 K 4.5 Cl 103 CO2 22 BUN 77 Cr
1.6 Glucose 120 Extended panel normal
8Differential Diagnosis
- Upper GI bleed
- Lower GI bleed
- Slow bleed from right colon
- Bleeding from small bowel
- Other causes of black stools
- Iron pills
- Licorice
- Bismuth (Pepto-Bismol)
- Blueberries
Melena
9Upper GI Bleed
- Location Proximal to ligament of Treitz
- Incidence 100 per 100,000 population
- Symptoms
- -Melena (70-80)
- (gt60 ml blood in gut for 8 hrs)
- -Hematemesis (45-50)
- -Presyncope (40)
- -Hematochezia (15-20)
- -Syncope (15)
- 80 bleeds stop spontaneously
UGI bleed has 10 mortality
10Etiologies of UGI
- Peptic ulcer disease (risk factors HP, NSAIDs,
stress, gastric acid) - Esophageal varices
- Mallory Weiss-tears
- Esophagitis
- Gastric/esophageal tumor
- Gastritis
- Aortoenteric fistula
- Lymphoma
- Vascular lesions Dieulafoy, angiodysplasia
- Coagulopathy
- Anticoagulant use
11Approach to UGI Bleed in ED
- 1.Assess hemodynamic stability (Shock?)
- - ABCs
- 2. Clinical assessment/ Resuscitation
(Transfuse?) - - 1st use crystalloid, use pRBCs if gt2-3L
crystalloids needed or signs of ischemia on EKG - -O2
- -CXR, EKG
- - Foley, labs
- - Place NGT confirm UGI source,
- assess rapidity of bleeding/ need for endoscopy
- -involve consultants early if needed
- -acid suppression therapy (PPI decreases risk of
acute rebleed) - 3. Risk stratify (Endoscopy? Inpatient or
outpatient?) - 4. Diagnose
12Risk Assessment Clinical Lancet 2000
- Triage for Outpatient management
- Pts with low risk of requiring intervention such
as endoscopic therapy or transfusion - Factors
- -BUN lt6.5 Hgbgt13(men), gt12 (women)
- -SBPgt110 HRlt100
13Risk Assessment Clinical
- Triage for Inpatient management
- -unknown/suspected variceal bleed
- -hemodynamic instability
- -ongoing symptoms of bleeding/ recurrent bleeding
- -comorbidity req. hospitalization (angina)
- -mental impairment or noncompliance
- -coagulopathy
- -anemia requiring transfusion
14Role of Endoscopy
Urgent endoscopy generally performed
for -unstable patients, continued
bleeding -diagnostic and therapeutic Elective
Endoscopy -for stable admitted
patients Endoscopic Prognostic Factors (NEJM
1994) Finding Incidence() Re-bleed
() 1.Active bleeding 8 85-100 2.Visible
vessel 17-50 18-55 3.Adherent clot 18-26 24-41 4
.Dark spots 12-18 5-9 5.Clean-based 10-36 0-1
15Non-variceal UGIBThe Controversy of Endoscopic
Triage in the ED
- Risk of re-bleeding is difficult to assess
clinically - Is endoscopic triage a solution?
- -Perform urgent endoscopy on all patients with
acute UGI bleed before admission/triage? better
health outcomes? More cost effective? - -identify high-risk patients early even if
clinically silent - -discharge low risk patients
16110 patients upper GI bleed (nonvariceal) and
stable VS randomized
Prospective RCT
Early endoscopy in ED 46(26/56) with low risk
lesions d/cd from ED per GI recs without adverse
outcome 8 pts upgraded (ward?IMC?ICU) based on
unexpected high risk endoscopic lesions Median
LOS 1 days Median cost 2,068
Endoscopy within 2 days of admission (control
group) Median LOS 2 days Median cost 3,662
Assess clinical outcomes and costs prospectively
for next 30 days
17The other side
- -Randomized multicenter trial of nonvariceal UGI
bleed (2004) - -no difference in LOS or clinical outcomes
- -difference in study 40 were recommended for
d/c based on endoscopy findings, however only 9
patients actually d/cd from ED (vs 46 in Lee
study) - -mimics clinical practiceattending physician
admitted patients based on own clinical judgment
despite low risk endoscopic results.
18Conclusion..
- Endoscopic triage is effective in avoiding
hospitalization and reducing costs of low-risk
patients - However, if findings of endoscopy do not affect
clinical practice by nonendoscopists (ED docs),
endoscopic triage is not an effective tool
19Back to our patient.Post-ED Course
- Patient admitted on a Friday?had another episode
of melena over the weekend? Slight drops in hct,
managed with fluids?EGD on Tuesday showed - 1) antral erosions
- 2) healing Mallory Weiss ulcer
- Pt d/cd with following recs per GI
- -check HP Ab and tx with triple tx if
- -continue PPI
- -outpatient colonoscopy
20Summary
- Assess hemodynamic stability
- Resuscitate
- History/physical risk factors?
- Re-assess need for resuscitation often
- NG lavage
- Endoscopy?
- All bleeding stopseventually
21References
- Bjorkman DJ. Endoscopic triage for nonvariceal
upper gastrointestinal bleeding the optimal
approach in 2001? ASGE wesbite, 2001. - Bjorkman DJ et al., Urgent vs elective endoscopy
for acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding an
effectiveness study. Gastrointest endosc 2004
6094-95. - Blatchford O et al., A risk score to predict need
for treatment for upper-gastrointestinal
hemorrhage. Lancet 2000 3561318-21. - Eisen GM et al., Guidelines An annotated
algorithmic approach to gastrointestinal
bleeding. Gastro Endo 2001 53853. - Jutabha R, Jensen D. Approach to the Adult
patient with upper gastro-intestinal bleeding In
UpToDate, Wellesley, MA, 2006. - Laine L, Peterson WL. Bleeding peptic ulcer. NEJM
1994 331717-27. - Lee JG, et al., Endoscopy-based traige
significantly reduces hospitalization rates and
costs of upper GI bleeding a randomized
controlled trial. Gastrointest Endosc
199950755-61. - Peter DJ and Daughtery JM, Evaluation of the
patient with gastrointestinal bleeding An
evidence-based approach. Emerg Med Clin NA
17239, 1999.