gastroentrology bleeding by dr mohammed hussien

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Gastrointestinal bleeding Dr/ Mohammed Hussien Assistant Lecturer of Gastroenterology & Hepatology Kafrelsheik University Membership at American Collage of Gastroenterology (ACG) Membership at Egyptian association for Research and training in Hepatogastroentrology Dr/ Mohammed Hussien Assistant Lecturer of Gastroenterology & Hepatology Kafrelsheik University Membership at American Collage of Gastroenterology (ACG) Membership at Egyptian association for Research and training in Hepatogastroentrology

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Page 1: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Gastrointestinal bleeding

Dr/ Mohammed Hussien Assistant Lecturer of Gastroenterology &

Hepatology Kafrelsheik University

Membership at American Collage of Gastroenterology (ACG)

Membership at Egyptian association for Research and training in Hepatogastroentrology

Dr/ Mohammed Hussien Assistant Lecturer of Gastroenterology &

Hepatology Kafrelsheik University

Membership at American Collage of Gastroenterology (ACG)

Membership at Egyptian association for Research and training in Hepatogastroentrology

Page 2: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

• Bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract is one of the most common reasons for admission to the hospital.

CAUSES OF GASTROINTESTINAL BLEEDING IN THE ADULT:

The commonest causes of upper GIT bleeding are varices, erosive gastritis and peptic ulcer

The commonest causes of lower GIT bleeding are hemorrhoids, dysentery, polyps and inflammatory bowel diseases

Page 3: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Etiology and severity of upper gastrointestinal tract hemorrhage

[I] Local Causes: They usually cause GIT bleeding only

1- DISEASES OF THE ESOPHAGUS: •Varices secondary to portal hypertension.•Esophagitis and esophageal peptic ulcer.•Benign and malignant tumors.•Mallory-Weiss syndrome.

2- DISEASES OF THE STOMACH • Gastric ulcer- Prepyloric ulcer -Pyloric channel ulcer• Gastric erosion----- Gastritis• Varices• Portal-hypertensive gastropathy• Gastric cancer• Polyp• Dieulafoy lesion

DOUDENUM:• Ulcer• Duodenitis• Aortoenteric fistula• Pancreatic pseudocyst• Post-sphincterotomy

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Page 5: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Esophagitis with bleeding

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Esophageal ulcer

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Mallory-Weiss tear

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Esophageal varices (I(

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Gastric ulcer

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Prepyloric ulcer

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Gastric varices

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Bleeding gastric varix

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Portal-hypertensive gastropathy

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Gastric cancer

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Gastric polyp

Hyperplastic polyp Inflammatory polyp Leiomyoma with bleeding

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Dieulafoy lesion

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Duodenal ulcer

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NSAID-induced

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Etiology of lower GIT bleeding

Source of hemorrhage Percentage

Colonic cancer 7

Colonic polyp 11

Diverticula 23

Colitis 11

Vascular ectasia 1

Large hemorrhoids only 12

Ulcer tear (rectum) 10

Upper gastrointestinal or small bowel source

10

No site identified 14

100

Page 20: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

3- DISEASES OF THE SMALL INTESTINE:

•Ulcers.

•Erosions

•Vascular malformations

•Intussusception

 

4- DISEASES OF THE COLON AND RECTUM:

•Hemorrhoids and anal fissure

•Infections as Bilharziasis, amoebiasis, and bacillary dysentery.

•Inflammatory bowel disease

•Benign and malignant tumors

•Colonic polyposis

•Ischemic bowel disease

•Vascular telangiectasias. ( Vascular malformation )

•Diverticulosis and diverticulitis

Page 21: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Sessile Tubular Adenoma

A small, sessile, A small, sessile, multilobulated lesion multilobulated lesion which proved to be a which proved to be a benign tubular benign tubular adenoma. adenoma. A smooth sessile polyp A smooth sessile polyp on a broad base. on a broad base.

Page 22: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Pedunculated Tubular Adenoma

Benign tubular adenoma Benign tubular adenoma on a long stalk .on a long stalk .The stalk is several The stalk is several times larger than the times larger than the polyp itself.polyp itself.

Page 23: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Sessile Villous Adenoma3-4 cm carpet-like 3-4 cm carpet-like tubulovillous adenoma of the tubulovillous adenoma of the cecum.cecum.

The orifice of the appendix is The orifice of the appendix is visible in the image on the left.visible in the image on the left.

1 cm sessile tubulovillous 1 cm sessile tubulovillous adenoma of the sigmoid colon.adenoma of the sigmoid colon.

Page 24: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Polyposis syndromes

• Polyposis syndromes are hereditary conditions that include: • Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP).• Gardner syndrome.• Turcot syndrome.• Peutz-Jeghers syndrome.• Cowden disease.• Familial juvenile polyposis.

• Some of the syndromes have extraintestinal features that help differentiate one syndrome from the other.

Page 25: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP(

Hundreds of benign Hundreds of benign tubular adenomas tubular adenomas throughout the colon.throughout the colon.

Small and large Small and large benign polyps benign polyps throughout the colon. throughout the colon.

Page 26: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Colon cancer

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diverticula

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Colitis

Pseudomembranous colitis

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Colitis

Crohn’s disease Ulcerative colitis

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Hemorrhoid

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Angiodysplasia

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Presentations & Definition 1- HEMATEMESIS:

It is bloody vomitus, either fresh and bright red

It results from upper GIT bleeding up to the 2nd part of the duodenum

proximal to ligament of Treitz at duodeno-jejunal junction.

Most frequently follows bleeding from the esophagus, stomach, or

duodenum

Melenemesis“coffee grounds” vomitingoccurs when blood is in contact with gastric acid for at least 1 hourUsually bleeding at a slower rate than those who have grossly bloody emesis

Page 33: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

2- MELENA:

It is tarry, shiny, black, sticky stool

It usually occurs when bleeding is slow enough to allow time for degradation of

blood.

It results from slow upper GIT bleeding but occasionally hemorrhage into the jejunum,

ileum, or even right colon can cause melena if gastrointestinal transit is slow.

It should be distinguished from the black stools caused by ingestion of iron or bismuth.

3-Hematochezia

• The passage of bright red stools

• Usually a sign of distal small bowel or brisk colonic hemorrhage

• 10% : actively bleeding from an upper GIT lesion, and have accelerated GI transit

times

Page 34: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

4- OCCULT BLOOD IN STOOL:

•Stool appears normal, but blood is detected when tested with guaiac test

and patients present with anemia. Microscopic blood when RBC are present

microscopically

 

5- ANEMIA:

•Patient may present without any objective signs of bleeding but rather with

symptoms of blood loss, such as dizziness, dyspnea on mild exertion, anginal

pain or fainting.

Page 35: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

[II] Generalized causes: GIT bleeding is usually part of generalized

bleeding tendency.

1- Defects of platelet and coagulation factors: ITP, leukemia,

hemophilia and hypoprothrombinemia.

2- Disorders of the blood vessels: Hereditary hemorrhagic

telangiectasia and vascular malformations.

Page 36: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Severity of hemorrhage

• The most accurate non-invasive indicator of the severity of acute blood loss

Shock : acute blood volume loss of at least 15 to 20% Postural vital sign changes

Upright tachycardia, Widening of the pulse pressure &/or upright systolic hypotension

Acute intravascular volume loss of at least 10 to 15% Nasogastric lavage is helpful but highly inaccurate in

estimating the severity of upper GIT bleeding (esp. duodenal bleeding)

Presence of shock or postural changes in vital sign

Page 37: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Hypovolemic shock

Mild Moderate Severe

(<20% blood volume) (20-40% blood volume) (>40% blood volume)

Cool extremiyies Same, plus : Same, plus :

Increased capillary refill time

Tachycardia Hemodynamic instability

Diaphoresis Tachypnea Marked tachycardia

Collapsed veins Oliguria Hypotension

Anxiety Postural changes Mental status deterioration (coma)

Page 38: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Severity of hemorrhage

With acute hemorrhage – the hematocrit and hemoglobin levels are

not reliable indicators of the severity of bleeding

For the hematocrit to fall, the blood plasma must have equilibrated

with ECF or with administered intravenous fluids, and this

equilibration may require 24 to 48 hours to occur

Page 39: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Initial evaluation and treatment

• Vital signs• Supine and upright blood pressure• Pulse

• If blood loss is significant

iv fluids must be started immediately

• Brisk bleeding Packed RBC

Page 40: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

The History

• Bleeding episode

• Any previous GIT hemorrhage

• Peptic ulcer

• Cancer

• Vascular ectasia

• Alcohol abuse

• Chronic liver disease – painless hematemesis of from esophageal varices

• Reflux esophagitis• Substernal burning pain• Regurgitation• Reflux symptom

• Mallory-Weiss tear• Forceful, dry retching or multiple episode of vomiting of food before the onset of

hematemesis

Page 41: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

The history

• PUD• Epigastric burnng pain promptly relieved by food or antacid• Nocturnal pain

• Use of NSAID

• Diverticular disease

• Colorectal cancer• Gradual weight loss• Intermittent blood in the stools• Altered bowel habits

• IBD• Long-standing mucous and bloody diarrhea

• Hemorrhoid• Presence of bright red blood surrounding well-formed, normal-appearing stools

Page 42: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Physical examination

• Chronic liver disease

• Spider angioma

• Ascites

• Gynecomastia

• PUD or gastritis

• Localized epigastric tenderness on palpation

• LGIT malignancy

• Palpable lower abdominal mass

• Hepatomegaly

• Weight loss

• Adenopathy

• Anorectal mass lesion (polyps, cancers, or large hemorrhoids)

• Digital examination

Page 43: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Management

• Nasogastric tube lavage

• Using room temperature water

• Indication the rate of ongoing bleeding

• Decrease the bleeding rate by constricting smaller gastric vessels

• Hct, Hgb, PT, PTT, ABO & Rh

• Shock or postural hypotension

• 4 to 6 units of packed RBC should be cross-matched

Page 44: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

UGIT bleeding• ulcer disease

• TMC cause of UGI bleeding

• 50% of moderately severe bleeding

• 35% of severe bleeding

• Esophageal or gastric varices

• 1/3 of massive UGI hemorrhage

• Usually associated with chronic liver disease

• Alcoholic > viral

• Large, firm liver

• Enlarged spleen

• Gross ascites

• Scleral icterus

• Palmar erythema

• Peripheral muscle wasting

Page 45: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

UGIT bleeding

• Mallory-Weiss tears

• Tears of GEJ

• 5% of minor UGI hemorrhage

• 20% of severe UGI hemorrhage

• Usually associated antecedent, forceful rething

• Nearly 50% - alcohol abuse

• Gastritis due to alcohol or NSAID

• Esophagitis

• GIT malignancies

Page 46: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Endoscopy

• Diagnostic procedure of choice

• High accuracy and immediate therapeutic potential

• Must be performed only after adequate resuscitation and clinical assessment of the patient

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Endoscopy

• Indication• Postural vital sign changes or shock• Multiple transfusion• Hematocrit below 30%• High index of suspicion of variceal hemorrhage• Recurrent hemorrhage from unknown sources• High risk for surgery

• Relative contraindication• Acute myocardial infarction• Severe chronic lung disease (SO2<90%)

• Hemodynamic instability• Patient agitation

Page 48: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Endoscopy

• Therapeutic endoscopy• Acute variceal bleeding

Endoscopic sclerotherayVarix band ligation

• UGIT hemorrhage

Endoscopic bipolar electrocoagulationHeater probe coagulationInjection of dilute epinephrine soln.

Page 49: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Esophageal varices (II(

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Bleeding control with heater probe

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Bleeding control with hemoclip

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Barium radiography

• “UGI series”, when performed by double-contrast technique, identifies at least 70-80% of lesions confirmed to be associated with UGIT bleeding• Noninvasive• Costs less than endoscopy• Readily available but has significant disadvantages,

particularly in patients who are bleeding briskly• Multiple lesions may be detected by barium radiography

and the actual site of bleeding may be difficult to assess

Page 53: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Angiography

• When the site of of UGIT bleeding is missed on endoscopy

• Selective infusion with vasopressin or coil embolization of actively bleeding arteries may control bleeding

• Bleeding must be active (> 30 mL/h)

• Expensive, time-consuming, invasive

• Requires transporting the patient to a specialized unit

Page 54: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Nuclear scintigraphy

• When less active blood loss (3 mL/h)

• Technetium red cell nuclear scintigraphy (RBC scan)

• Non-invasive

• Portable gamma camera

• Often performed before any angiographic evaluation to prove the presence of active bleeding and to assist in the localization of the bleeding focus

Page 55: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

LGIT bleeding• Colonic diverticula

• 1/4 of all episodes of hemodynamically significant bleeding from the LGIT

• Nearly always painless• Acute large-volume hematochezia

• Colonic cancer and polyps• 20% of LGI bleeding• Often present as hematochezia , particularly with lesions in the

distal sigmoid colon and rectum• Cf) proximal – IDA and frequently dark black or bloody stool

• UC and CD• Bloody diarrhea, tenesmus, long-standing history of IBD

• Vascular ectasia

Page 56: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Proctoscopy

• Careful evaluation of the anorectal junction are the initial diagnostic step for all patients with hematochezia

• Hemorrhoids or lacerations, diverticula, colitis, polyps, and cancer

Page 57: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Double-contrast barium radiography

• If blood loss is modest (as evidence by a normal hematocrit and vital sign), sigmoidoscopy may be followed by double-contrast radiography

• Highly accurate for detecting even smaller polyps and superficial mucosal abnormalities such as colitis

Page 58: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Colonoscopy

• Indicate LGIT hemorrhage with anemia

• Not only allows the site of hemorrhage to be determined accurately but also allows biopsy of suspicious mass lesions

• Polypectomy

• Coagulation technique

Page 59: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Technetium RBC scintigraphy

• Detect active bleeding at a rate of at least 3 to 10 mL/h

• Usually localizes the site but not the cause of active hemorrhage

Angiography• Bleeding at a rate exceeding 30 to 50 mL/h

• Vasopressin or embolization technique

Page 60: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien

Finally, Occult GIT hemorrhage

• 5%• 3 general categories• 1) Hematemesis or melanemesis but a “negative” upper

endoscopy• 2) Hematochezia but a “negative” colonoscopy• 3) Positive fecal OB testing and negative routine upper and

lower endoscopies• Modalities• Technetium RBC scintigraphy• Small bowel enteroclysis• Small bowel endoscopy• Angiography• Capsule endoscopy

Page 61: Gastroentrology Bleeding by dr Mohammed Hussien