Emergency – Upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage
Definitions in upper gastrointestinal (UGI) haemorrhage
- UGI haemorrhage: bleeding that arises proximal to the ligament of Treitz i.e. from the oesophagus, stomach or duodenum
- Haematemesis: vomiting of blood from the UGI tract
- Coffee-ground vomit: vomiting of dark brown granular matter presumed to be digested blood
- Melaena: passage of black, tarry stools presumed to be digested blood from the UGI tract
- Haematochezia: passage of blood per rectum usually due to a LGI haemorrhage but occasionally due to an UGI haemorrhage with rapid transit time
Aetiology of UGI haemorrhage
- Oesophagus
- Oesophageal varices
- Oesophagitis
- Oesophageal carcinoma
- Mallory-Weiss tear
- Stomach
- Gastric ulcer
- Gastritis
- Gastric carcinoma
- Duodenum
- Duodenal ulcer
- Duodenitis
- Other
- Thrombocytopenia
- Coagulopathy
- Aorto-enteric fistula
Pathophysiology of UGI haemorrhage
- The commonest cause of UGI haemorrhage is peptic ulcer disease, which may occur in the stomach (gastric ulcer) or duodenum (duodenal ulcer)
- Peptic ulcer disease is commonly due to infection with Helicobacter pylori and/or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) use
- Helicobacter pylori directly disrupts the mucosal barrier and causes inflammation of the gastric and duodenal mucosa
- NSAIDs inhibit the enzyme cyclo-oxygenase, reducing the synthesis of prostaglandins which are responsible for stimulating alkaline mucus secretion, thereby exposing the UGI mucosa to damage from gastric acid
- Oesophageal varices are dilated porto-systemic anastomotic veins that occur due to portal hypertension secondary to chronic liver disease
History in UGI haemorrhage
- Haematemesis
- If so what volume? Enough to fill a cup? A bowl? A saucepan?
- Coffee-ground vomiting (volume?)
- Melaena (volume?)
- Haematochezia (volume?)
- Abdominal pain
- Malignancy red flags
- Cachexia
- Anorexia
- Night sweats
- Dysphagia
- Dyspnoea
- Severity assessment
- Light-headedness
- Loss of consciousness
- Causes assessment
- Chronic liver disease
- Alcohol misuse
- NSAIDs or steroids
- Warfarin
- Past medical history
- Previous GI bleed
- Known PUD/varices
- Malignancy
- Liver disease
- Known cardiovascular/respiratory disease (fitness to undergo sedation and/or intubation for endoscopy)
Examination in UGI haemorrhage
- Airway
- May be compromised by reduced conscious level
- Breathing
- Kussmaul’s breathing: hyperventilation to compensate for metabolic acidosis manifesting as ‘air hunger’
- Circulation
- Cold, pale peripheries
- Prolonged capillary refill times (CRT >2 s)
- Decreased skin turgor
- Reduced jugular venous pressure (JVP)
- Sunken eyes
- Dry lips, mouth and tongue
- Tachycardia
- Postural hypotension
- Absolute hypotension
- Disability
- Confusion
- Reduced conscious level
- Exposure
- Abdominal examination
- Guarding/rigidity
- Masses
- Per rectum (PR) examination to look for melaena or haematochezia
- Signs of chronic liver disease
- Jaundice, ascites
- Hands: clubbing, Dupuytren’s contracture, palmar erythema
- Spider naevi
- Gynaecomastia
- Portal hypertension: splenomegaly and caput medusae
- Encephalopathy
- Abdominal examination
Risk stratification of UGI haemorrhage (pre-endoscopy Rockall score)
- Age
- <60 years (0)
- 60-79 years (1)
- ≥80 years (2)
- Shock
- No shock ie heart rate (HR) <100 bpm & systolic blood pressure (SBP) >100 mmHg (0)
- Tachycardia ie HR >100 bpm & SBP >100 mmHg (1)
- Hypotension ie HR >100 bpm & SBP <100 mmHg (2)
- Co-morbidity
- No major co-morbidity (0)
- Cardiac failure, ischaemic heart disease (2)
- Renal failure, hepatic failure, disseminated malignancy (3)
- A score of zero is associated with a predicted mortality of 0.2%
- A score of seven is associated with a predicted mortality of 50%
- Only patients with a Rockall score of zero can be safely managed as an outpatient; consider for discharge and outpatient follow-up if:
- Age <60 years and
- No evidence of haemodynamic instability and
- No significant co-morbidity and
- No witnessed haematemesis or haematochezia
- Rockall score ≥1 should not be discharged; consider for admission and early UGI endoscopy if:
- Age >60 years or
- Haemodynamic instability or
- Known chronic liver disease or
- Witnessed haematemesis or haematochezia
Initial investigation of UGI haemorrhage
- Venous blood gas (VBG) looking for a lactic acidosis indicative of shock
- Full blood count (FBC): anaemia may not be apparent initially after acute haemorrhage
- Urea & electrolytes (U&Es): deamination of amino acids from digestion of blood proteins may lead to disproportionately elevated urea
- Liver function tests (LFTs)
- Coagulation
- Cross-match
- Erect chest radiograph (CXR) looking for pneumoperitoneum indicative of bowel perforation
Further investigation of UGI haemorrhage
- UGI endoscopy is the definitive investigation and management
- Helicobacter pylori testing for those with peptic ulcer disease
Initial management of UGI haemorrhage
- Assess the patient from an ABCDE perspective
- Maintain a patent airway: use manoeuvres, adjuncts, supraglottic or definitive airways as indicated and suction any sputum or secretions
- Deliver high flow oxygen 15L/min via reservoir mask and titrate to achieve oxygen saturations (SpO2) 94-98% or 88-92% if known to have COPD
- Attach monitoring
- Pulse oximetry
- Non-invasive blood pressure
- Three-lead cardiac monitoring
- Request 12 lead ECG and portable CXR
- Obtain intravenous (IV) access and take bloods and VBG
- Fluid resuscitation
- Guided by clinical context
- Treat shock aggressively
- Give boluses of crystalloid 250-500 ml IV and re-assess after each
- Aim for permissive hypotension so as not to disrupt any clots that have formed or are in the process of forming
- Shock refractory to fluid resuscitation should be considered for referral to critical care for insertion of arterial and central lines and vasoactive drug therapy (vasopressors and/or inotropes)
- Transfusion
- Be aware that anaemia from haemorrhage will not be apparent initially and will be exacerbated by crystalloid fluid resuscitation
- Once ≥30% of circulating volume is lost, red transfusion should be initiated, ideally with fully cross-match blood, or with type specific or even group O rhesus negative (O negative) in an emergency. A trigger of Hb<8 if often used
- In variceal bleeding, a transfusion trigger of 7 is reasonable
- Transfusion with additional products such as platelets, fresh frozen plasma, cryoprecipitate may be necessary
- Activate the major haemorrhage protocol if necessary
- Give PCC to anyone actively bleeding on warfarin
- Catheter to monitor fluid balance
- Antibiotics
- Give broad spectrum antibiotics e.g. co-amoxiclav 1.2g TDS iv or tazocin 4.5g iv TDS to all patients with UGI haemorrhage and chronic liver disease. This has been shown to have a significant reduction on mortality
- Terlipressin
- Give terlipressin 2g iv to all patients with suspected variceal haemorrhage prior to UGI endoscopy
- It acts as a splanchnic vasoconstrictor, reducing portal hypertension and the degree of variceal haemorrhage
- Contraindicated in patients with cardiovascular disease due to the risk of ischaemia: must have non-ishaemic ECG and be intravascularly replete prior to giving
- Prokinetic
- Metoclopramide 10mg IV can be given to empty the stomach contents to allow better views at endoscopy
- UGI endoscopy
- UGI endoscopy is the definitive investigation and management
- Techniques include band ligation, clipping, injections of sclerosants and thermal coagulation
- Timing depends on pre-endoscopy Rockall score and clinical context; if the patient is unstable and/or has active bleeding then UGI endoscopy should be performed once resuscitation has taken place
- If immediate UGI endoscopy is unnecessary, it should be performed within 24 hours
- If UGI endoscopy fails to control haemorrhage, arterial embolisation or surgery may be required; the treatment of choice for uncontrolled variceal haemorrhage is transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunting (TIPS)
- Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs)
- Current NICE guidance is NOT to give acid-suppression (PPIs, H2-RA) to patients with suspected non-variceal bleeds prior to endoscopy).
- IV PPIs eg omeprazole 40 mg IV should be given following UGI endoscopy in patients found to have peptic ulcer disease
- In practice however, this is still commonly given prior to endoscopy
Further management of UGI haemorrhage
- Sengstaken-Blakemore tube
- In torrential UGI haemorrhage secondary to oesophageal varices consider balloon tamponade via insertion of a Sengstaken-Blakemore tube
- The tube is inserted down the oesophagus, the gastric balloon inflated, then pulled back to occlude the gastro-oesophageal junction
- The oesophageal balloon is then inflated to tamponade oesophageal varices
- Stop aspirin, NSAIDs and anticoagulants
- Warfarin may need urgent reversal depending on the international normalised ration (INR)
- Eradication therapy for those who test positive for Helicobacter pylori
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