GI bleeding Flashcards
(87 cards)
what is the most common GI emergency
GI bleeding
what is the incidence of GI bleeding
incidec of 50-200 per 100,000
where is the highest incidence for GI bleeding
in low socio-economic areas
How much does GI bleeding cost the NHS a year
168 million a year
who is the mortality of GI bleeding increased in
- elderly
- co-morbidity
- anticoagulation drugs
What is the definition of upper GI bleed
- bleeding proximal to the ligament of treitz
What is the definition of lower GI bleeding
- bleeding distal to the ligament of treitz
What do upper GI patients present with
- haematemesis - vomiting - fresh/altered blood
- malaena - black tarry stool
- hematochezia - fresh or altered blood passing rapidly PR - large upper GI bleed
What is malaena
- black tarry stools and has a characteristic smell of altered blood
What is haematochezia and what it is a sign of
- fresh or altered blood passing rapidly PR
- sign of large upper GI bleed
What are the symptoms of lower GI bleed
- malaena
- haematochezia
What is the commonest cause of GI bleeding upper or lower
Upper GI bleeding - accounts for 70%
What is the commonest cause of upper GI bleeding
- Peptic ulcer disease
What are the causes of upper GI bleeding
- Peptic ulcer disease 35-50%
- oesophageal varices 5-10%
- mallory-weiss tear 15%
- oesophagitis
- gastritis/ gastric erosions 8-15%
- Drugs - NSIADS, aspirin, steroids, thrombolytics, anticoagulants
- erosive duodenitis
- portal hypertensive gastropathy
- Upper GI malignancy
- vascular malformation
- can be no cause
What are the causes of lower GI bleeding
- diverticular disease
- haemorrhoids
- mesenteric ischaemia
- coliits
- cancer
- rectal ulcers
- angiodysplasia
- radiation
- drugs
- others
what can cause or are risk factors of peptic ulcer disease
- helicobacter pylori
- NSAIDs
- smoking
- alcohol
what are the symptoms of peptic ulcer disease
- epigastric pain
- nausea
- early satiety - can block the stomach
What are the complications of peptic ulcer disease
- bleeding
- perforation
What are the causes of peptic inflammation
- GORD
- helicobacter pylori
- NSAIDs
- smoking
- alcohol
- obesity
what are varices
- submucosal venous dilation due to increases in portal pressures
What is the causes of portal hypertension leading to gastro-oesophageal varicose
- Pre-hepatic – thrombosis (portal or splenic vein)
- Intra-hepatic – cirrhosis (80% in UK), schistosomiasis (most common worldwide), sarcoid, myeloproliferative diseases, congenital hepatic fibrosis
- Post-hepatic – Budd-Chiari syndrome, right HF, constrictive pericarditis, veno-occlusive disease
what is the most common cause of lower GI bleeding
- diverticular bleed
what is the cause of diverticular bleeding
- straining/constipation
- muscle spasm
- low dietary fibre
- genetics
What are the causes of haemorrhoids
- straining to have a bowel movement
- sitting for long periods of time
- chronic constipation or diarrhoea
- being overweight or obese
- pregnancy