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Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.
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Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

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Page 1: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Rajeev Jain, M.D.

Page 2: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding

• Clinical Presentation

• Acute Upper GI Bleed

• Acute Lower GI Bleed

Page 3: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Core Principles in GI Bleeding Management

• Assessment and stabilization of hemodynamic status

• Determine the source of bleeding

• Stop active bleeding

• Treatment of underlying abnormality

• Prevent recurrent bleeding

Page 4: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding ManagementDefinitions

Hematemesis: bloody vomitus (bright red or coffee-grounds)

Melena: black, tarry, foul-smelling stool

Hematochezia: bright red or maroon blood per rectum

Occult: positive stool occult test

Symptoms of anemia: angina, dyspnea, or lightheadedness

Page 5: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding ManagementPatient Assessment

• Hemodynamic status• Localization of bleeding source• CBC, PT, and T & C• Risk factors

– Prior h/o PUD or bleeding– Cirrhosis– Coagulopathy– ASA or NSAID’s

Page 6: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding ManagementInitial Patient Assessment

Vital Signs Blood LossSeverity of GI

Bleed

Shock (resting hypotension)

20-25% Massive

Postural (orthostatic hypotension)

10-20% Moderate

Normal <10% Minor

Page 7: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding ManagementResuscitation

• 2 large bore peripheral IV’s

• Normal saline or LR

• Packed RBCs

• Correct coagulopathy

Page 8: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

GI Bleeding ManagementLocation of Bleeding

• Upper– Proximal to Ligament of Treitz– Melena (100-200 cc of blood)– Azotemia– Nasogastric aspirate

• Lower– Distal to Ligament of Treitz– Hematochezia

Page 9: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Acute UGIBDemographics

• Over 400,000 admissions annually• 80% self-limited• Mortality 10-14%• Continued or recurrent bleeding - mortality 30-

40%• Nonvariceal UGIB w/o complication*

– Mean LOS 2.7 days, $3402 (2008 $)

• Nonvariceal UGIB with complication*– Mean LOS 4.4 days, $5632 (2008 $)

Adam V, Barkun A. Value Health. 2008;11:1-3.

Page 10: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Risk Stratification

Scoring Systems

Page 11: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Blatchford ScoreRockall Score

Page 12: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

UGIB Risk Stratification – AIMS65

• Albumin < 3.0 g/dL, • INR > 1.5, • Altered mental

status, • Systolic blood

pressure 90 mm Hg or lower, and

• Age older > 65 years.

Saltzman JR et al. Gastrointest Endosc 2011:1215-22.

• Large clinical database - CareFusion

• 187 US hospitals• Recursive partitioning • 2004-5 29,222 pts to

derive risk score• 2006-7 32,504 pts to

validate

Page 13: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

UGIB Risk Stratification – AIMS65

Saltzman JR et al. Gastrointest Endosc 2011:1215-22.

Page 14: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

• Peptic ulcer disease– Gastric ulcer– Duodenal ulcer

• Mallory-Weiss tear• Varices• Esophagitis• Dieulafoy’s lesion• Vascular anomalies• Malignancy

• Post-procedural• Cameron’s lesions• Hemobilia• Hemorrhagic

gastropathy• Aortoenteric fistula

Acute UGIBDifferential Diagnosis

Major Causes Minor Causes

Page 15: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Peptic Ulcer Disease

Forrest Class Stigmata

IA Arterial spurting

IB Arterial oozing

IIA Visible vessel

IIB Adherent clot

IIC Pigmented flat spot

III Clean based

Forrest JA, Finlayson ND, Shearman DJ: Endoscopy in gastrointestinal bleeding. Lancet  1974; 2:394-7

Page 16: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Endoscopic Appearanceof Ulcers

Clean based ulcer Nonbleeding visible vessel

Page 17: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Risk Stratification after Endoscopy

Page 18: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Prognostic Features at Endoscopy in Acute Ulcer Bleeding

Page 19: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

• Thermal– Bipolar probe– Monopolar probe– Argon plasma

coagulator– Heater probe

• Mechanical– Hemoclips– Band ligation

• Injection– Epinephrine– Alcohol– Ethanolamine– Polidocal

Endoscopic Therapy of PUD

Page 20: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Endoscopic Therapy of PUD

Laine and Peterson New Eng J Med 1994;331:717-27.

Page 21: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Risk of Recurrent Bleeding after Endoscopic Therapy

Page 22: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Effect of Proton-Pump Inhibition on Peptic Ulcer Bleeding

Gralnek et al. New Eng J Med 2008;359:928-37.

Page 23: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of PUD after EGD in High Risk Pts

• Proton-pump inhibitor 80 mg IV bolus dose plus continuous infusion for 72 hrs

• Admit to monitored bed or ICU setting• Initiate oral intake of clear liquid diet 6 hrs after EGD

in pts with hemodynamic stability• Transition to oral PPI after completing IV course• Perform testing for H. pylori infection• For selected patients, discuss need for NSAIDs and

antiplatelet therapy

Gralnek et al. New Eng J Med 2008;359:928-37.

Page 24: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of PUD after EGD in Low Risk Pts

• Oral proton-pump inhibitor• Initiate oral intake with a regular diet 6 hrs

after EGD in pts with hemodynamic stability• Perform testing for H. pylori infection• For selected patients, discuss need for

NSAIDs and antiplatelet therapy• Consider early discharge in selected pts

Gralnek et al. New Eng J Med 2008;359:928-37.

Page 25: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Mallory-Weiss Tear

Page 26: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Esophageal Varices

Page 27: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Acute Variceal Bleeding

Suspected Variceal Bleeding

EndoscopyBand ligation or sclerotherapyContinue Octreotide for 5 days

Early rebleeding

Failure to control TIPS or surgery

Octreotide 50 ug bolus, 50 ug/hrConservative blood volume resuscitationAntibiotics

Page 28: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Antibiotic Prophylaxis in GI Bleeding in Cirrhotic Patients

• Fluoroquinolones or amoxicillin + clavulinic acid

• Meta-analysis 1

– Decrease rates of infection• SBP, bacteremia

– Increased short-term survival

• RCT 2

– Reduction in early rebleeding

1.Bernard et al.Hepatology. 29(6):1655-61.1999.2.Hou et al. Hepatology. 39(3):746-53.2004.

Page 29: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Variceal Band Ligation

Page 30: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt (TIPS)

IVC

Portal Vein

Splenic Vein

Coronary Vein

Page 31: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Aortoduodenal Fistula

Aorta

Duodenum

Graft

Fistula

Page 32: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Acute UGIB Surgery

• Recurrent bleeding despite endoscopic therapy

• > 6-8 units pRBCs

Page 33: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG Guidelines

Initial Assessment and Risk Stratification

• Hemodynamic status should be assessed immediately upon presentation and resuscitative measures begun as needed (Strong recommendation).

• Blood transfusions should target Hgb ≥ 7 g / dl, with higher Hgbs targeted in patients with clinical evidence of intravascular volume depletion or comorbidities, such as coronary artery disease (Conditional recommendation).

• Risk assessment should be performed to stratify patients into higher and lower risk categories and may assist in initial decisions such as timing of endoscopy, time of discharge, and level of care (Conditional recommendation).

• Discharge from the ED without inpatient endoscopy may be considered in patients with urea nitrogen < 18.2 mg / dl; Hgb ≥ 13.0 g / dl for men (12.0 g / dl for women), systolic blood pressure ≥ 110 mm Hg; pulse < 100 beats / min; and absence of melena, syncope, cardiac failure, and liver disease, as they have < 1 % chance of requiring intervention (Conditional recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 34: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG GuidelinesPre-endoscopic interventions

• Intravenous infusion of erythromycin (250 mg ~ 30 min before endoscopy) should be considered to improve diagnostic yield and decrease the need for repeat endoscopy. However, erythromycin has not consistently been shown to improve clinical outcomes (Conditional recommendation).

• Pre-endoscopic intravenous PPI (e.g., 80 mg bolus followed by 8 mg / h infusion) may be considered to decrease the proportion of patients who have higher risk stigmata of hemorrhage at endoscopy and who receive endoscopic therapy. However, PPIs do not improve clinical outcomes such as further bleeding, surgery, or death (Conditional recommendation).

• If endoscopy will be delayed or cannot be performed, intravenous PPI is recommended to reduce further bleeding (Conditional recommendation).

• Nasogastric or orogastric lavage is not required in patients with UGIB for diagnosis, prognosis, visualization, or therapeutic effect (Conditional recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 35: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG GuidelinesTiming of endoscopy

• Patients with UGIB should generally undergo endoscopy within 24 h of admission, following resuscitative efforts to optimize hemodynamic parameters and other medical problems (Conditional recommendation).

• In patients who are hemodynamically stable and without serious comorbidities endoscopy should be performed as soon as possible in a non-emergent setting to identify the substantial proportion of patients with low-risk endoscopic findings who can be safely discharged (Conditional recommendation).

• In patients with higher risk clinical features (e.g., tachycardia, hypotension, bloody emesis or nasogastric aspirate in hospital) endoscopy within 12 h may be considered to potentially improve clinical outcomes (Conditional recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 36: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG Guidelines - Endoscopy

• Stigmata of recent hemorrhage should be recorded as they predict risk of further bleeding and guide management decisions. The stigmata, in descending risk of further bleeding, are active spurting, non-bleeding visible vessel, active oozing, adherent clot, fl at pigmented spot, and clean base (Strong recommendation).

• Endoscopic therapy should be provided to patients with active spurting or oozing bleeding or a non-bleeding visible vessel (Strong recommendation).

• Endoscopic therapy may be considered for patients with an adherent clot resistant to vigorous irrigation. Benefi t may be greater in patients with clinical features potentially associated with a higher risk of rebleeding (e.g., older age, concurrent illness, inpatient at time bleeding began) (Conditional recommendation).

• Endoscopic therapy should not be provided to patients who have an ulcer with a clean base or a fl at pigmented spot (Strong recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 37: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG Guidelines - Endoscopy

• Epinephrine therapy should not be used alone. If used, it should be combined with a second modality (Strong recommendation).

• Thermal therapy with bipolar electrocoagulation or heater probe and injection of sclerosant (e.g., absolute alcohol) are recommended because they reduce further bleeding, need for surgery, and mortality (Strong recommendation).

• Clips are recommended because they appear to decrease further bleeding and need for surgery. However, comparisons of clips vs. other therapies yield variable results and currently used clips have not been well studied (Conditional recommendation).

• For the subset of patients with actively bleeding ulcers, thermal therapy or epinephrine plus a second modality may be preferred over clips or sclerosant alone to achieve initial hemostasis (Conditional recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 38: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Management of Ulcer Bleeding: ACG Guidelines - Therapy after initial endoscopy

• After successful endoscopic hemostasis, intravenous PPI therapy with 80 mg bolus followed by 8 mg/h continuous infusion for 72 h should be given to patients who have an ulcer with active bleeding, a non-bleeding visible vessel, or an adherent clot (Strong recommendation).

• Patients with ulcers that have flat pigmented spots or clean bases can receive standard PPI therapy (e.g., oral PPI once daily) (Strong recommendation).

• Routine second-look endoscopy, in which repeat endoscopy is performed 24 h after initial endoscopic hemostatic therapy, is not recommended (Conditional recommendation).

• Repeat endoscopy should be performed in patients with clinical evidence of recurrent bleeding and hemostatic therapy should be applied in those with higher risk stigmata of hemorrhage (Strong recommendation).

• If further bleeding occurs after a second endoscopic therapeutic session, surgery or interventional radiology with transcathether arterial embolization is generally employed (Conditional recommendation).

Laine & Jensen Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:345–360

Page 39: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

International Consensus on Nonvariceal Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding:

Postdischarge ASA and NSAIDs

• In patients with previous ulcer bleeding who require an NSAID, it should be recognized that treatment with a traditional NSAID plus PPI or a COX-2 inhibitor alone is still associated with a clinically important risk for recurrent ulcer bleeding.

• In patients with previous ulcer bleeding who require an NSAID, the combination of a PPI and a COX-2 inhibitor is recommended to reduce the risk for recurrent bleeding from that of COX-2 inhibitors alone.

Barkun AN, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2010;152:101-113.

Page 40: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

International Consensus on Nonvariceal Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding:

Postdischarge ASA and NSAIDs

• In patients who receive low-dose ASA and develop acute ulcer bleeding, ASA therapy should be restarted as soon as the risk for cardiovascular complication is thought to outweigh the risk for bleeding.

• In patients with previous ulcer bleeding who require cardiovascular prophylaxis, it should be recognized that clopidogrel alone has a higher risk for rebleeding than ASA combined with a PPI.

Barkun AN, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2010;152:101-113.

Page 41: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

• Diverticulosis• Colitis

– IBD (UC>>CD)– Ischemia– Infection

• Vascular anomalies• Neoplasia• Anorectal

– Hemorrhoids– Fissure

• Dieulafoy’s lesion• Varices

– Small bowel– Rectal

• Aortoenteric fistula• Kaposi’s sarcoma

• UPPER GI BLEED

Acute LGIBDifferential Diagnosis

Page 42: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

DIAGNOSES % OF TOTAL

Diverticulosis 40Vascular anomalies 30Colitis 21Neoplasia 14Anorectal 10Upper GI sites 10

Acute LGIBDiagnoses in pts with hemodynamic compromise.

Zuccaro. ASGE Clinical Update. 1999.

Page 43: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Diverticulosis

Page 44: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Diverticular Bleeding

Page 45: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Hemorrhoids

Page 46: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Bleeding AVM

Page 47: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Radiation Proctitis

Page 48: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

• Incidence 0.3 - 3.0 %• Etiology Incomplete obliteration of

the vitelline duct.• Pathology50% ileal, 50% gastric,

pancreatic, colonic mucosa• Complications

– Painless bleeding (children, currant jelly)– Intussusception

Acute LGIBMeckel’s Diverticulum

Page 49: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

Study Yield

% Comments

Colonoscopy 69-80 Therapeutic

Arteriography 40-78 1 ml/min,

risks

Tagged RBC Scan 20-72 Localization

Acute LGIBEvaluation

Zuccaro. ASGE Clinical Update. 1999.

Page 50: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

• Resuscitation

• UGI source

• Most bleeding ceases

• Colonoscopy

• No role for barium studies

Acute LGIBKey Points

Page 51: Gastrointestinal Bleeding Rajeev Jain, M.D.. GI Bleeding Clinical Presentation Acute Upper GI Bleed Acute Lower GI Bleed.

SUMMARYGI Bleeding Management

• Assessment and stabilization of hemodynamic status

• Determine the source of bleeding

• Stop active bleeding

• Treatment of underlying abnormality

• Prevent recurrent bleeding