1. Upper gastrointestinal bleeding is a medical emergency caused by bleeding in the upper digestive tract proximal to the duodenojejunal junction. Common causes include esophageal varices, peptic ulcers, and Mallory-Weiss tears.
2. Symptoms include hematemesis (vomiting of blood) and melena (black tarry stools), and clinical assessment focuses on signs of blood loss severity. The Modified Blatchford Score stratifies bleeding risk.
3. Initial management involves intravenous access, fluid resuscitation, gastric lavage, medications, and urgent endoscopy for diagnosis and treatment such as injection therapy or band ligation. Surgery or TIPSS procedure may be needed for
3. INTRODUCTION
• Medical emergency.
• Bleeding proximal to duodeno- jejunal junction
( Ligament of treitz).
• Presents with hematemesis,melena or both.
12. CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
• Mild blood loss ( <15%)-Resting tachycardia.
• Syncope .
• Orthostatic hypotension, tachycardia .
• Supine hypotension – blood volume loss of atleast 40% .
• Shock supervenes if bleeding continues or recur.
13. FEATURES SUGGESTING SEVERE BLEEDING
• Presence of clots in vomitus.
• Fresh blood in the nasogastric aspirate.
• Hematochezia.
• Hypotension and tachycardia.
• A fall in systolic BP>10 mmHg and rise in a pulse rate
of>20/min on changing from lying to sitting posture.
14. MODIFIED BLATCHFORD SCORE
• Risk scoring system.
• To stratify the risk of needing endoscopic therapy or
of having poor outcome.
• Advantage – Used before endoscopy to to predict the
need for intervention to treat bleeding.
• Low score -> low risk of adverse outcome.
15.
16. DIAGNOSIS
1. History of peptic ulcer.
2. History of alcohol or NSAID ingestion.
3. History of jaundice, pedal edema,abdominal
distension,splenomegaly & other features of liver cell
failure – Variceal bleeding.
4. Hematemesis preceded by retching and blood free
vomitus – Mallory-Wiess tear.
5. History of dysphagia and weight loss prior to bleed
- Malignancy.
17. MANAGEMENT OF NON-VARICEAL BLEEDING
1. INTRAVENOUS ACCESS
Using one large- bore cannula.
2. INITIAL CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
Define circulatory status – severe bleeding >
tachycardia, hypotension,oliguria.
Seek evidence of liver disease – decompensated
cirrhosis> jaundice,hepatosplenomegaly,ascites.
Identify comorbidity –
cardiorespiratory,cerebrovascular and renal diseases.
18. 3.BASIC INVESTIGATIONS
Full blood count –
Chronic or subacute bleeding- anemia.
Hypersplenism – thrombocytopenia.
Urea and electrolytes – Evidence of renal failure.
Severe bleeding – elevated blood urea with normal
creatinine clearance.
Liver function tests – evidence of chronic liver disease.
Prothrombin time.
Cross- matching.
19. 4.RESUSCITATION
Intravenous crystalloid fluid – to raise BP
Blood transfusion – If BP is low& patient is
actively bleeding.
Broad spectrum antibiotics – suspected
chronic liver disease.
Management of comorbidities.
20. 5.GASTRIC LAVAGE.
• Introduce nasogastric tube & aspirate.
• Perform gastric lavage by instilling 500 ml of ice cold water
every 30- 60 min.
• Do not apply vigorous suction.
• Nasogastric tube to be kept for 24 hours after cessation of
the bleed to facilitate detection of fresh blood.
• Gastric aspiration helps to:
✓ to assess the rate of bleeding.
✓clear the stomach prior to endoscopy.
✓dilute acid – pepsin in stomach there by reducing
bleeding from erosion.
21. 6.OXYGEN - to all patients in shock .
7.ENDOSCOPY
✓ Carried out after adequate resuscitation
within 24 hours.
✓ Injection of dilute adrenaline to the bleeding point.
✓Thermal modality treatment by heat probe,
electrocoagulation.
22. 8.MONITORING
Pulse,Blood pressure and urine output.
9.SURGERY
Indications:
✓ Endoscopic hemostasis fails to stop active
bleeding
✓Rebleeding occurs in an elderly or frail patient
or twice in a young patients.
Choice of operation depends on the site and diagnosis of
bleeding lesion.
23. .
•Gastric ulcer biopsy should be taken.
•Local excision.
•Partial gastrectomy.
10.ERADICATION OF H.PYLORI
. Proton pump inhibitors taken simultaneously with
two antibiotics: Amoxicillin,Clarithromycin
Metronidazole. For atleast 7 days.
24. OTHER MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
• ✓ H2- blockers and proton pump inhibitors.
• ✓Ranitidine 50 mg IV eighth hourly.
• ✓ Pantoprazole 40 mg IV stat followed by 8mg/ hr
infusion.
25. VARICEAL BLEEDING
• The most important consequence of
portal hypertension.
• Esophageal varices > within 3- 5 cm of
gastro esophageal junction.
26. Predisposing factors :
• Large varices.
• High portal venous pressure.
• Salicylates & NSAID’s – mucosal erosion.
• Cherry red spots and stripes on endoscopy.
27. CLINICAL FEATURES
✓Painless massive haematemesis with or without
malena.
✓Mild postural tachycardia to profound shock
depending on the extent of blood loss.
✓ Associated features of liver cell failure, ascites and
Portal hypertension.
28. DIAGNOSIS
• Fibreoptic endoscopy – shows varices& bleeding site.
Done within 8 hours of bleed.
• USG – to confirm patency of portal vein.
• A wedged hepatic venous pressure 25mmHg above
that in IVC support variceal bleeding.
29. MANAGEMENT OF VARICEAL BLEEDING
1.Primary prevention of variceal bleeding.
2.Management of acute variceal bleeding.
3.Secondary prevention of variceal bleeding.
30. PRIMARY PREVENTION OF VARICEAL BLEEDING
If non bleeding varices are identified at endoscopy
Beta blocker therapy – propranolol ( 80- 160 mg/d)
nadolol( 40- 240mg/ d)
Carvedilol(6.25 to 12.5mg/d).
33. PHARMACOLOGICAL REDUCTION OF PORTAL VENOUS
PRESSURE
• Terlipressin – synthetic vasopressin analogue.
Reduces portal blood flow and/ or
intrahepatic resistance & hence
brings down portal pressure.
Dose: 2mg IV 4times daily until bleeding
stops,and then 1mg 4 times
daily for upto 72 hours.
• Octreotide - Somatostatin analogue.
Initial bolus dose is 50 mcg followed by
continuous infusion at a rate
of 50 mcg/ hour.
34. ENDOSCOPIC VARICEAL BAND LIGATION
• Varices sucked into a cap placed on the end of the
endoscope,occluded with a tight rubber band.
• Occluded varix sloughs with variceal obliteration.
• Repeated every 2- 4 weeks until all varices are
obliterated.
• Regular follow up endoscopy required.
• Prophylactic acid suppression with proton pump
inhibitors.
37. BALLOON TAMPONADE
Sengstaken- Blakemore tube.
- Tube introduced into stomach through mouth.
- Has 2 balloons that exert pressure in the fundus
of stomach and in the lower esophagus.
- Gastic balloon is inflated with 200-250 ml air.
- If bleeding does not stop esophageal balloon is
inflated.
- It should be deflated for about 10 min in every 3
hours to avoid esophageal mucosal damage.
39. TRANSJUGULAR INTRAHEPATIC PORTOSYSTEMIC STENT
SHUNT ( TIPSS)
•A shunt placed between portal vein and hepatic vein
to provide a portosystemic shunt ->
reduce portal pressure.
•Carried out under radiological control via
the internal jugular vein.
•Effective treatment for both esophageal and
gastric varices.
41. PORTOSYSTEMIC SHUNT SURGERY
✓ Prevents recurrent bleeding.
✓ Disadvantages: High mortality rate
Leads to encephalopathy.
ESOPHAGEAL TRANSECTION
✓ As a last resort when bleeding cannot be controlled by
other means.
42.
43. SECONDARY PREVENTION OF VARICEAL BLEEDING
• Bleeding recurs in 65% patients within 1 year after
initial bleed.
• Beta- blockers : Propranolol 80- 60 mg/ day.
• Endoscopic variceal band ligation/ sclerotherapy.
• TIPSS