GI - Bleed Flashcards

1
Q

80% of UPPER G.I. bleed are caused by?

Other causes?

A
#Peptic ulcer - 30%
#Esophageal varices - 30%
#Erosive esophagitis - 8%
#Mallory-Weiss tear - 6%

Erosion, tumor, portal gastropathy, esophageal ulcer, Cameron lesion, Dieulafoy’s lesion, AV fistula, Hemobilia,

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2
Q

Appreciate tumors associated with bleeding?

A

Esophageal, gastric, GIST

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3
Q

Causes of BRISK upper G.I. bleed?

A
#Peptic ulcer
#Varices
#Dieulafoy's lesion
#Aortoenteric fistula
#Hemobilia (usually procedural)
#Neoplasm
#Hemosuccus pancreaticus (aneurysm/#pseudoaneurysm)
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4
Q

Predictors of severe G.I. bleed?

A
#Hematemesis
#Comorbidities (cirrhosis, malignancy)
#Hemodynamic Instability
#Hemoglobin under 8
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5
Q

When to manage UPPER G.I. bleed as an outpatient?

A

Glasgow-Blatchford score

#BUN under 18
#Normal hemoglobin
#Systolic blood pressure over 109 
#Heart rate under 100
#No melena, syncope,
#No history of liver disease, cardiac failure

(none of these things, 100% negative predictive value for severe G.I. bleed)

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6
Q

Upper G.I. bleed most reliably predicted by which individual variables?

A
#Melena
#Nasogastric lavage with blood
#BUN: creatinine over 30
#Absence of blood clots in the stool
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7
Q

Pre-endoscopic Management of UPPER G.I. bleed? REDO

A
#Crystalline resuscitation until HR100
#transfusion if hemoglobin 1.5
#Octreotide and anabiotics if suspected variceal bleeding
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8
Q

Patient with upper G.I. bleed – would delay endoscopy if?

A

INR>3

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9
Q

Went to get urgent (within 12 hours) endoscopy?

A

Suspected variceal bleeding

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10
Q

Treatment of low risk versus high risk ulcers after endoscopy?

A

Oral PPIS, PO intake, and early hospital discharge

Hospitalization and IV PPI therapy for 72 hours

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11
Q

Strongest predictors of bleeding after endoscopic therapy for ulcers?

A
#Autonomic instability
#Active bleeding at endoscopy
#Ulcer over 2 cm
#Ulcer location in posterior duodenum or lesser gastric curvature
#Age over 60
#Hemoglobin under 10
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12
Q

When to do repeat endoscopy?

A
After 8-12 weeks after PPI therapy if:
#Symptoms persist
#Concern for underlying malignancy
#Incomplete visualization of the stomach
#Biopsies were not taken initially
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13
Q

All patients with upper G.I. bleed due to ulcers should be tested for? If negative?

A

H pylori

Retest (due to false negative possibility in the setting of bleeding, PPI)

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14
Q

Post upper G.I. bleed, should anticoagulation be restarted?

A
#Restart aspirin within 3 to 5 days in patients with cardiovascular disease
#If bare metal stent, restart aspirin but hold Plavix temporarily for high-risk ulcers
#If DES, restart Plavix immediately for low risk ulcers and as soon as possible for high risk
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15
Q

Patient with upper G.I. bleed s/p eradication of H pylori. On aspirin – necessity of long-term PPI?

Went to begin long term PPI?

A

Not necessary

#GI bleed and H pylori negative
#Use of NSAIDs, anticoagulants, glucocorticoids, or Antiplatelet therapy
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16
Q

Patients with thrombotic risk should receive re-anticoagulation after G.I. bleed if?

A
#atrial fibrillation with previous embolic event
#CHADS score 3+
#Recent ACS
#Mechanical heart valve
#DVT/PE
17
Q

How to restart anticoagulation on a patient with recent G.I. bleed but high thrombotic risk?

A

Bridging

OR

Begin oral anticoagulation 7 days after bleeding event

18
Q

80% of lower G.I. breeds are caused by?

Other causes?

A
#Diverticulosis - 30%
#Colitis (ischemic > IBD > radiation > infectious) - 24%
#Hemorrhoids - 14%
#Post polypectomy bleeding - 8%

Polyps, cancer, rectal ulcer, angiodysplasia, Aortoenteric fistula, intussusception, Meckel diverticulum, Dieulafoy’s

19
Q

Causes of severe lower G.I. bleeding?

A
#Diverticulosis
#Colitis
#Aortoenteric fistula
#Colonic/rectal varices
#Neoplasm
#Intussusception
#Meckel diverticulum
#Angiodysplasia
20
Q

Lower G.I. bleed and pain – differential?

A
#Colitis (ischemic, IBD, radiation, infectious)
#Drugs (NSAIDs)
21
Q

When to manage LOWER G.I. bleed as an outpatient?

A
#Age under 60
#Hemodynamic stability
#No gross rectal bleeding
#Obvious anorectal source on rectal exam/sigmoidoscopy
22
Q

Blood transfusion threshold for patients with colonic bleeding?

A

Hemoglobin if 9

23
Q

When to scope patient with lower G.I. bleed?

A
#Generally after 24 hours
#Within 12-18 hours if rebleeding
24
Q

P82

A

P82

25
Q

Dieulafoy lesion?

Cameron lesion?

A

Large tortuous, submucosal arteriole (Usually in the gastric Cardia) that erodes and bleeds

Erosions found in 5% of large hiatal hernias