Title: GI%20bleeds:%20what
1GI bleeds whats old, whats new?
- Grand Rounds, Department of Emergency Medicine
- April 15, 2004
- Christine Hall MSc MD FRCPC
2Outline
- Upper GI bleeds overall summary
- PUD
- Drinkers and non drinkers
- Variance
- NSAIDs
- Upper GI bleeds specific physiology
- NSAIDs
- Upper GI bleed Rx issues
- PPIs
- EGD
- Discharge criteria
- Variceal bleeds
- Lower GI bleeds
- Patient disposition
3Introduction
- GI bleeding
- 2 of all US hospital admissions
- 5 of admissions originating in the ED
- Majority of bleeds are UGI
4UGI bleeding incidence
- 103/100,00 adult per year in UK
- incidence 23/100,00 in age under 30 to 485/100,00
in over 75 - men more than double women except in elderly
- 14 occurred in inpatients already in hospital
for some other reason - 27 of cases (37 female, 19 male) patients were
aged over 80.
Rockall TA, Logan RF, Devlin HB, Northfield TC.
Gastrointest Endosc. 2002 Jan55(1)1-5.
5UGI Bleeding mortality
- Overall mortality 14
- 11 in emergency admissions
- 33 in inpatients
- In the emergency admissions
- 65 of deaths in pts under 80 associated with
malignancy or organ failure at presentation - Mortality for patients under 60 in the absence of
malignancy or organ failure at presentation was
0.8.
Rockall TA, Logan RF, Devlin HB, Northfield TC.
Gastrointest Endosc. 2002 Jan55(1)1-5.
6UGI bleeds in drinkers
- From August 1, 1990 through September 9, 1994.
Prospective. - Pts referred to GI (selection bias)
- subnormal hematocrit on or within 12 h of
admission or a fall of at least 5 points from
previous - Upper GI endoscopy was performed in all patients
within 48 h of admission - Alcohol use was quantitated as chronic (80 g or
more per day for at least 1 month), binge,
occasional, or none.
7UGI bleeds in drinkers
- 727 pts 212 (29) chronic alcohol users
- Peptic ulcer disease was most common cause of
bleeding (60). - Gastropathy etiological in only 32 patients (4)
- portal hypertension in 22 patients
- NSAID induced gastropathy in 5
- Alcohol induced gastropathy in 5 pts
- bleeding was mild and self-limited.
Wilcox CM, Alexander LN, Straub RF, Clark WS Am
J Gastroenterol. 1996 Jul91(7)1343-7
8UGI bleeds in drinkers
- Causes of bleeding were compared between drinkers
and nondrinkers - drinkers were more likely to bleed from varices
(p 0.024) - portal hypertension-related causes (p lt 0.01),
- Peptic ulcer was more common in nondrinkers
compared with chronic ETOH - (67 vs 53 p lt 0.01)
- Esophagitis (p 0.95) and Mallory-Weiss tear (p
0.15) were NS between the two groups.
Wilcox CM, Alexander LN, Straub RF, Clark WS Am
J Gastroenterol. 1996 Jul91(7)1343-7
9UGI bleed variance
- Qiu, YJ. Zhonghua Hu Li Za Zhi. 1987
Jun22(6)269-70. - Relation between hemorrhage and the waxing or
waning of the moon - Unfortunately in Chinese so not available for
today
10Upper GI bleeds pathophysiology
- Esophagitis
- Candidal
- Non candidal
- bisphosphonates
- Esophageal tears
- Gastritis
- Thats all well say about the benign causes
11UGI bleed diagnosis to OG or not to OG?
- Not great evidence for confirming UGI bleed by
putting in NG or OG - Practice discouraged by most GIs
- Can confound UGI bleed re trauma of insertion
- Relative contraindication in variceal bleed
although this is witchcraftmore about that later
12PUD Causation
13H. Pylori
- Serology never becomes negative once positive
- Even if H. Pylori is eradicated
- Complicates repeat breath tests or biopsies
- PPIs are antimicrobial for h.pylori despite poor
initial performance in development as an
antibiotic
14Current Rx for H. Pylori Eradication
15NSAID induced ulcers
16NSAIDS whats the problem?
- Toxic effects of NSAIDs thought to be due to
Cox-1 inhibition - launch of the cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) selective
NSAIDs was based on 2 hypotheses - the major adverse effects limiting the
usefulness of nonselective NSAIDs are
gastrointestinal in nature - COX-2 selective NSAIDs are associated with fewer
gastrointestinal adverse effects than
nonselective NSAIDs.
17The CLASS Trial
- To determine whether celecoxib, a COX-2-specific
inhibitor, is associated with a lower incidence
of significant upper GI toxic effects and other
adverse effects compared with conventional
NSAIDs. - double-blind, randomized controlled trial
conducted from September 1998 to March 2000 - Three hundred eighty-six clinical sites in the
United States and Canada
18The CLASS trial
- 8059 patients gt/18 years old, OA or RA, 7968
received at least 1 dose of study drug. - 4573 patients (57) received treatment for 6
months - Random assign
- celecoxib, 400 mg twice per day (2 and 4 times
the maximum RA and OA dosages, respectively - n 3987
- ibuprofen, 800 mg 3 times per day (n 1985)
- diclofenac, 75 mg twice per day (n 1996).
- ASA for CV prophylaxis (lt/325 mg/d) was
permitted.
19CLASS Trial
- Incidence of prospectively defined symptomatic
upper GI ulcers and ulcer complications
(bleeding, perforation, and obstruction) and
other adverse effects during the 6-month
treatment period. - Overall annual incidence rates of UGI ulcer
complications alone 0.76 vs 1.45 with NSAIDs
(p0.09) - Overall annual incidence rate of UGI ulcer
complications plus symptomatic ulcers 2.08 vs
3.54 , p0.02 - Pts not on ASA
- UGI complication alone 0.44 vs 1.27, p0.04
- UGI complication plus symptoms 1.40 vs 2.91, p
.02 - For patients onASA
- UGI complications alone 2.01 vs 2.12,l p0.92
- UGI complications plus symptomatic ulcers 4.70
vs 6.00 (P .49).
20CLASS conclusions
- Fewer celecoxib-treated patients than
NSAID-treated patients experienced chronic GI
blood loss, GI intolerance, hepatotoxicity, or
renal toxicity. - No difference was noted in the incidence of
cardiovascular events between celecoxib and
NSAIDs, irrespective of aspirin use. - CONCLUSIONS Celecoxib, at big doses, was
associated with a lower incidence of symptomatic
ulcers and ulcer complications combined, as well
as other clinically important toxic effects,
compared with NSAIDs at standard dosages (800 mg
tid). - The decrease in upper GI toxicity was strongest
among patients not taking aspirin concomitantly.
JAMA. 2000 Sep 13284(10)1247-55.
21The VIGOR trial
- clinical upper gastrointestinal events occur in 2
to 4 percent of patients who are taking
nonselective NSAIDs - Is rofecoxib associated with a lower incidence of
clinically important upper gastrointestinal
events than Naproxen among patients with
rheumatoid arthritis - randomly assigned 8076 RA patients who were at
least 50 years of age (or at least 40 years of
age and receiving long-term glucocorticoid
therapy) - received either 50 mg of rofecoxib daily or 500
mg of naproxen twice daily - primary end point was confirmed clinical upper
gastrointestinal events (gastroduodenal
perforation or obstruction, upper
gastrointestinal bleeding, and symptomatic
gastroduodenal ulcers)
22VIGOR Trial
- Rofecoxib and naproxen had similar efficacy
against rheumatoid arthritis. - median follow-up of 9 months
- 2.1 per 100 pt years confirmed gastrointestinal
events with refecoxib - 4.5 per 100 pt-years with naproxen
- relative risk, 0.5 CI 0.3 to 0.6 Plt0.001
- The respective rates of complicated confirmed
events (perforation, obstruction, and severe
upper gastrointestinal bleeding) - 0.6 per 100 patient-years refecoxib
- 1.4 per 100 patient-years naproxen
- relative risk, 0.4 CI 0.2 to 0.8 P0.005
23VIGOR trial
- The incidence of myocardial infarction
- lower among patients in the naproxen group than
among those in the rofecoxib group - 0.1 percent vs. 0.4 percent
- relative risk, 0.2 CI 0.1 to 0.7
- the overall mortality rate and the rate of death
from cardiovascular causes were similar in the
two groups.
Bombardier C, Laine L, Reicin A, Shapiro D,
Burgos-Vargas R, Davis B, Day R, Ferraz MB,
Hawkey CJ, Hochberg MC, Kvien TK, Schnitzer TJ
N Engl J Med. 2000 Nov 23343(21)1520-8
24So.
- increased incidence of total and
nongastrointestinal serious adverse events with
the COX-2 selective NSAIDs remains a major
concern - increased morbidity may be a manifestation of the
COX-2 selectivity or the supramaximal doses of
these drugs used in the trials - proof that the increased harm was not caused by
the COX-2 selectivity of the drugs depends on a
randomized controlled trial of COX-2 selective
NSAIDs at usual doses vs. nonselective NSAIDs - Thus far, no such trial
- What about Cox-2s plus PPIIs?...no trial
25Rx of UGI bleed
26Upper GI bleeds
- Coagulation and fibrinolysis are dependent on
intragastric pH - When pH is below 6, platelet aggregation is
abolished - When pH is below 4, fibrin clots are digested by
gastric pepsin - In UGI bleed, need to raise gastric pH and keep
it there for 72 hours
27PUD H2 blockers
- H2 receptor antagonists inhibit gastric acid
production - Little if any evidence of improved outcome in
active GI bleed - Insufficient acid suppression
- Rapid drug tolerance
28Proton Pump Inhibitors
- More profound and sustained acid suppression
- Binds irreversibly to HKATPase (proton pump)
inhibiting actively secreting parietal cells - Predictable t1/2 1 hr but effect 24 hrs
- No tolerance developed
- Excellent safety profile, no dose reduction in
renal failure/cirrhosis - IV Omeprazole released in 1991
29PPIs in PUD
- IV Proton pump inhibitors
- Lau et al NEJM 2000 Aug 3 343 (5) 310-16
- After endoscopic Rx, bleed recurs in 15-20
- Assess whether use of high dose PPI decreased
recurrence within 30 days - Dbl blind rand to Omeprazole bolus and infusion
vs placebo - All got Omeprazole orally x 2 weeks post infusion
30PPIs in PUD (Lau, ctd)
- 240 patients, recur in 6.7 of omeprazole vs
22.5 of placebo - Most recurrent bleed occurs in first three days
- Only evidence for IV infusion is in acute bleed
with ulcer with high risk stigmata (i,.e visible
vessel) - But, EGD was done within 1 hour 24/7
31Waiting for EGD
32PPIs while waiting for EGD
- R. Enns C. Andrews, UBC, Can J Gastro 2003
Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2003. - To evaluate cost effectiveness of IV PPI while
awaiting EGD compared with EGD alone - Probabilities of rebleeding and surgery taken
into account - In a hypothetical cohort of 1000 patients, IV PPI
utilization while awaiting EGD mean savings of
20,700 Canadian - Using PPI pre EGD averted 37 rebleeds
- Use of PPI while awaiting EGD is cost effective
- Finidngs do not apply to low risk stigmata,
variceal bleeds, lower GI bleeds
33PUD RUGBE
- Canadian Registry of patients with Upper GI
Bleeding Undergoing Endoscopy - Pt char and Rx from 1999 on
- J. Romagnolo is local PI
- Protective effect of PPI use and EGD in specific
patient subgroups - Meta-analysis supports high dose IV PPIs leads to
improvement when coupled with EGD - Optimum dose, timing, and subgroup analysis needs
further work
34PPIs the local challenge
- CHR Pharmanews
- Vol 28 Issue 3 Revised November 2003
- Kaplan Gf, Bates D, McDonald D, Romagnulo J.
- Inappropriate Prescribing Leading to Rapidly
Escalating Costs of IV PPI in the Calgary Health
Region
35PPIs the local cost
Year FMC PLC RGH Total
1999 56K 35K 9K 100K
2000 149K 86K 73K 308K
2001 207K 96K 121K 425K
2002 168K 94K 123K 386K
36PPIs Local guidelines
- Ideally withold PPIs until EGD but case by case
adaptationi.e. night - IV Omeprasole 80 mg bolus and 8mg/hr infusion for
max of 72 hours - Pts with HRS on EGD (arterial or venous active
bleed, visible vessel, adherent clot) should have
endo Rx and then 72 hr infusion - No HRS stop infusion
- Inpts who are NPO get bid dosing not infusion
37PPIs Local guidelines ctd
- Clinical equivalence between IV PPI and oral PPI
in GERD - Clinical equivalence between IV PPI and NG PPI
- 40 mg PPI IV 13.70
- 40 mg PPI po 0.45
38Can UGI bleeds go home?
- Selection of patients for early discharge or
outpatient care after acute UGI haemorrhage.
National Audit of Acute Upper GI Haemorrhage - Attempted to identify patients who had negligible
risk of further bleeding or death and for whom
early discharge or even outpatient management
would be possible with no adverse effect on
standards of care.
39UGI bleed and discharge
- Used a validated risk scoring system based on
- age (score 0-2)
- presence of shock (0-2)
- comorbidity (0-3)
- diagnosis (0-2)
- endoscopic stigmata of recent haemorrhage (0-2)
- maximum possible score was 11.
40Rockalls Scoring System
VARIABLE 0 1 2 3
Age lt60 60-79 gt 80 ----
Shock HRlt100 HRgt100, SBP gt100 HRgt100, SBPlt100 ----
Comorbidity None ---- CHF, IHD, any major dx Renal failureLiver failureMets
Dx post OGD MW tear All other dx UGI malig, Blood in UGI ----
Major SRH None or dark spot ---- Adherent clot, vis vessel ----
41UGI bleed and discharge
- 2531 patients who underwent endoscopy after an
acute admission - 744 (29.4) of the 2531 patients scored 2 or less
on the risk score - Of these
- 32 or 4.3 rebled 95 Cl 3.0-6.0
- 1 or 0.1 died 95 CI 0.006-0.75
- Conclusions the risk score identifies patients
at low risk of rebleeding or death - Median hospital stay increased with risk score
- Within low risk score categories of 5 or less
- trend of increasing hospital stay as the time
between admission and endoscopy increased
Lancet. 1996 Apr 27347(9009)1138-40 Rockall TA,
Logan RF, Devlin HB, Northfield TC.
42UGI bleed and discharge
- Three year prospective validation of a PRE-EGD
risk stratification in patients with acute UGI
hemorrhage - To assess the accuracy of a risk stratification
used at initial assessment (does not rely on EGD) - To identify groups with increased risk of
mortality and requirement for urgent treatment
intervention - Prospective assessment of risk stratification in
consecutive patients with acute
upper-gastrointestinal haemorrhage.
43UGI risk stratification
- 3-year period, 1349 consecutive patients, risk
stratified and followed up for 2 weeks - Two-week, all-cause mortality, re-bleeding, and
need for urgent treatment intervention.
44UGI bleed and discharge without EGD?
- Stratification within the high-risk group
predicted a significant increased risk of 2-week,
all-cause mortality (P lt 0.001) - Hi risk 11.8
- Intermediate risk 3
- Low risk 0
- High risk strata significantly higher re-bleeding
(P lt 0.001) - Hi risk 44.1
- Intermediate 2.3
- Low risk 0
- High risk strata significantly higher need for
urgent treatment intervention (P lt 0.001) - Hi risk 71
- Intermediate risk 40.6
- Low risk 2.6
Cameron EA, Pratap JN, Sims TJ, Inman S, Boyd D,
Ward M, Middleton SJ. Eur J Gastroenterol
Hepatol. 2002 May14(5)497-501.
45So, who admits?
- Physician specialty and variations in the cost of
treating patients with acute upper
gastrointestinal bleeding. - Pts stratified into three groups based on a
validated risk score - Length of stay and hospital costs compared
- primarily cared for by internists, surgeons, and
gastroenterologists - Median length of stay (2 days) if admitted to GI
- Significantly shorter than admitted under other
physicians (P lt 0.05) - Median hospitalization cost (2856) if admitted
to GI - Significantly lower than other services (P lt
0.01) - No differences in the time to endoscopy among
services.
Quirk DM, Barry MJ, Aserkoff B, Podolsky
DK Gastroenterology. 1997 Nov113(5)1443-8
46Now for some risky business
47Variceal bleeding
- Esophageal and/or gastric varices account for
about 20 of all GI bleeds - Most dramatic and life threatening presentation
of portal hypertension - 25-50 of bleeds in cirrhotic pts is non variceal
- Dave P et al, Clin Gastroenterol 5113, 1983
- After 1 bleeding episode, risk of a second is 70
- Accounts for 50 of all deaths from cirrhosis
48Variceal bleeding
- Risk of mortality from each bleeding episode is
20-84 - Risk depends on etiology of portal hypertension,
hepatic reserve of the pt., duration of
hemorrhage prior to presentation
49IV Octreotide
- Octreotide or Somatostatin is a potent
nonselective vasoconstrictor - Should be routine in known or strongly suspected
variceal bleed - Can be used alone or in conjunction with
sclerotherapy/banding - No role in non variceal UGI bleeds
50Balloon tamponade
- Originated in the 1930s, first filled with water
not air - 1950 Sengstaken and Blakemore invented double
lumen balloon - Modified by Linton, Nachlasm, Boyce and Edlich
- Currently have
- Blakemore 3 lumens gastric, esoph and gastric
suction - Linton as above with esoph aspiration port as
well
51Balloon tamponade
- Roberts still recommends NG insertion in all GI
bleed..no real evidence for itnice in flight or
if ongoing vomiting - There is no evidence to support passage of an NG
tube increases variceal bleed - Meeroff et al Mangement of massive UGI bleed
Hosp Practice, 1984 - Management of varices is substantially different
from other causes
52Balloon tamponade
- Used when sclerotherapy not available
- Used when vasoconstrictor therapy is not adequate
- Can control bleeding in up to 80 of cases
- In the absence of endoscopy indications
- pt with known portal hypertension
- prior variceal bleed
- not responding to vasoconstrictor Rx
53Balloon Tamponade of Varices
- Use of GEBT has serious/lethal complications
- Overall complication rate higher than most other
ED procedures - Clear indications and complete understanding of
placement is essential - best placed by the individual most familiar with
technique (which is usually no-one including GI
guys)
54GEBT
- Patient at risk re uncooperative, or hepatic
encephalopathy - If patient is not awake, alert and fully
cooperative should be intubated - Roberts, Procedures in emergency medicine
- Patients at extremely high risk for regurg and
aspiration - Threshold for intubation should be lower than
usual
55GEBT Procedure
- Unfamiliar to most docs
- Gastric balloon holds 500 to 700 mL, test both
balloons for patency - Patient at 45 degrees or in left lateral
- Anesthetize nose and post pharynx if necessary
- Deflate balloons and lock off, lubricate tube
56GEBT procedure
- Pass through mouth is preferred (especially in
intubated) but nose can be used - Pass tube to at least 50 cm mark or max depth
allowed by tube length - Suction to esoph and gastric ports to minimize
aspiration risk even further prior to inflation - Confirm radiographically prior to inflation
57GEBT procedure
- Once markers seen can begin to inflate gastric
balloon - Should monitor pressure in balloon as inflated
- Use AIR not water
- Repeat radiograph once inflated
- Clamp air ports on tube and gently pull back on
tube to snug up to GE junction
58Indications to inflate the esophageal balloon
- If continuous bloody aspirate from gastric
suction - Absolutely must be done with manometer guidance
- Pressure at lowest level that stops bleeding and
should not exceed 45 mm Hg - If ongoing bleeding with both balloons up, likely
gastric and NOT esophageal source
59GEBT traction
- Use if inflation of balloons has been done and
active gastric bleeding persists - External traction on the tube
- Foam rubber block often included in the kit
- Various traction mechanisms
60GEBT Complications
- Occur in 8-16 of patients
- Mortality considered in about 3
- Variceal hemorrhage itself carries 40-80
mortality - One study reported GEBT directly casued death in
22 of pts in which it was used
61GEBT complications
- Major occur in 8-16
- Mortality around 3
- Common
- Aspiration pneumonia
- Asphyxiation (balloon migration, cut the tubes)
- Esophageal necrosis
- Uncommon
- Esophageal perforation (overinflation or duration
tube) - Duodenal rupture
- Tracheobronchial rupture
- Periesophageal abcess
- mediastinitis
62GEBT Complications
- Minor
- Common
- Gastroesophageal ulceration
- Regurgitation
- Chest discomfort
- Back pain
- Pressure necrosis re traction
- Uncommon
- Epistaxis
- Pharyngeal erosions
- Pressure necrosis of tongue
- hiccups
63Problems at the bottom end
64Lower GI bleeds
- defined as blood loss that originates from a
source distal to the ligament of Treitz - results in hemodynamic instability or symptomatic
anemia - approximately 10 to 15 of patients presenting
with acute severe hematochezia have an upper
gastrointestinal source of bleeding - most common causes of lower gastrointestinal
bleeding are diverticulosis, hemorrhoids,
ischemic colitis, and angiodysplasia - lower gastrointestinal bleeding ceases
spontaneously in most cases
65LGI bleed, does colonoscopy affect outcome?
- management of lower-GI hemorrhage remains
controversial largely because outcomes data are
lacking - Hypothesized that clinical factors, such as
comorbidity, hemodynamic instability, and timing
of colonoscopy, are associated with hospital
lengths of stay - Retrospective review of LGI hospitalized, 1993 to
2000 (selection bias) - regression model was constructed to explore
associations between time to discharge (i.e.,
length of stay) and clinical parameters.
66LGI, colonoscopy continued
- 565 hospitalizations, mean length of stay was 6.7
days - Colonoscopy was performed during 415
hospitalizations - 1/3 discharged within 48 hours after colonoscopy
- Regression model, decreased likelihood of
discharge if - hemodynamic instability
- higher comorbidity
- performance of a tagged red blood cell nuclear
scan - surgery for hemostasis
- Colonoscopy at any timepoint associated with an
increased likelihood of being discharged - hazard ratio 1.5 95 CI 1.2, 1.8.
- Mean lengths of stay for colonoscopy within 24
hours of hospitalization was shorter - 5.4 vs. 7.2 days plt0.008
Early colonoscopy for acute lower GI bleeding
predicts shorter hospital stay a retrospective
study of experience in a single
center.Schmulewitz N, Fisher DA, Rockey DC.
67Predictors of severe LGI bleed
- Harvard group
- Goal to determine risk factors for severe acute
LIB - 252 consecutive patients admitted with acute LIB
- Data were collected on 24 clinical factors
available in the first 4 hours of evaluation - outcome was severe bleeding, which was defined
as - continued bleeding within the first 24 hours of
hospitalization documented by transfusion of gt or
2 units of blood and/or hematocrit decrease of
gt or 20) - recurrent bleeding after 24 hours of stability
(additional transfusions, further hematocrit
decrease of gt or 20, or readmission for LIB
within 1 week of discharge) - Severe LGI bleeding occurred in 123 pts (49)
68Predictors of Severe LGI bleed
- Independent correlates of severe bleeding were as
follows - Heart rate, gt 100/min
- OR 3.67 (1.78-7.57)
- Systolic blood pressure, lt 115 mm Hg
- OR 3.45 (1.54-7.72)
- Syncope
- OR 2.82 (1.06,7.46)
- Nontender abdominal examination
- OR 2.43 (1.22-4.85)
- Bleeding per rectum during the first 4 hours of
evaluation - OR, 2.32 (1.28-4.20)
- Aspirin use
- OR, 2.07 (1.12-3.82)
- More than 2 active comorbid conditions
- OR, 1.93 (1.08-3.44)
Strate LL, Orav EJ, Syngal S. Arch Intern Med.
2003 Apr 14163(7)838-43.
69So, who can be discharged from the ED?
- Lit search 0 papers, so we are adrift on this
one
70Questions?
71Can you differentiate based on stool color?
- Now, here was a fun trial.
- Subjective reporting of the color of blood passed
per rectum has been used to predict the location
of gastrointestinal bleeding - validity of this clinical approach has never been
evaluated systematically - this study determined the spectrum of patient and
physician descriptors used to characterize the
color of blood passed per rectum - evaluated prospectively if an objective test of
stool color would correlate with or improve upon
subjective descriptions in predicting bleeding
locations - I know you can hardly wait for the results...
72Stool color continued (hows that breakfast
going?)
- objective test employed was a card containing
five numbered colors that typify the spectrum of
stool blood colors - 120 pts used 23 different descriptors or terms to
verbalize the color of blood they passed per
rectum - in 22 of cases there was a seeming discrepancy
between their verbalized color and the color they
pointed to on the test card
73Stool color results
- Pts pointing to black card resulted in closer
matching to an upper bleeding source than
physicians using terminology such as melena or
tarry stools, p lt0.02 - Pts picking the brightest red colors resulted in
closer matching to a coloanorectal bleeding
source than physicians using the terms
hematochezia or bright red blood per rectum, p
lt0.02 - PPV of the black card for UGI bleed was very high
both when patients pointed to this color or when
it was determined from the available stool (0.95
and 0.98, respectively) - PPV of brightest red card for LGI bleed was 100
when patients picked it than and 0.83 if stool
was directly compared. - Anyone want to order cards?
74Hematochezia vs melena and outcome
- Consecutive patients in Atlanta
- August 1, 1990 - September 31, 1994
- Prospective
- Vital signs and stool color were recorded on
admission to ED - Endoscopy was performed in all patients, usually
within 48 h of admission - Cause of bleeding determined by endoscopy,
surgery, or autopsy.
75Hematochezia results
- 727 pts
- 104 (14) presenting with hematochezia (18 with
bright red blood and 86 with maroon blood). - In those with hematochezia most common causes of
bleeding were duodenal ulcer (44) and gastric
ulcer (20) - Hematochezia vs melena patients with
hematochezia were older (55 vs 50 yr, p lt 0.01)
and more likely to present with duodenal ulcer
bleeding (43 vs 25, p lt 0.01) - No differences in vital signs, including
prevalence of shock, or admission Hb
concentration were found b/t hematochezia vs
melena.
76Conclusions
- Transfusion requirements
- 5.4 vs 4.0 units, p 0.01
- Need for surgery
- 11.7 vs 5.7, p 0.03
- Mortality
- 13.6 vs 7.5, p 0.05
- All significantly higher in patients with
hematochezia than in those with melena
Wilcox CM, Alexander LN, Cotsonis G Am J
Gastroenterol. 1997 Feb92(2)231-5