What causes melena?
UGI bleeding
Due to degradation of blood by enzymes in GI tract
What are the most common causes of melena?
Peptic ulcer disease
Variceal bleeds
UGI malignancy
What is the most common artery affected in peptic ulcer disease?
Gastroduodenal artery
What clinical features should you ask the patient about?
Colour and texture of the stool
- Dark black
- Tar
- Sticky
Associated symptoms
- Haematemesis
- Abdo pain
- Weight loss
- Dyspepsia
Clarify any iron tablets
What examinations should be performed on a patient with melena?
DRE
Full abdominal examination
What investigations are done in melena?
Initial
- Routine bloods - help identify underlying cause
- Drop in Hb and rise in urea:creatinine ratio - digested Hb produces urea which gets absorbed
- G&S
Further
- OGD, can identify cause or necessary interventions
- CT angiogram if OGD inconclusive
- Colonoscopy
How is melena managed?
A-E
Blood products if unstable
Treat the underlying cause
What is rectal bleeding also called?
Haematochezia
What causes haematochezia?
Generally caused by LGI tract bleeding, can be caused by small bowel lesions
What are the most common causes of haematochezia?
Diverticulosis
Haemorrhoids
Malignancy
What key aspects of the history should be asked with PR bleeding?
Nature of bleeding
- Duration
- Frequency
- Colour
- Related to stool
Associated symptoms
- Pain
- Haematemesis
- Melena
- PR mucus
- Weight loss
What examinations should be done in rectal bleeding?
Abdomen - localised tenderness or palpable masses
PR
What is used to see if patients with LGI bleeds can be managed as an outpatient?
Oakland Score
What investigations are done for rectal bleeding?
Routine bloods
G&S
Stool cultures - exclude infective causes
Haemodynamically unstable - resuscitate with blood, urgent CT angiogram
What further investigations can be done for haematochezia?
Colonoscopy - exclude left colonic pathology
UGI endoscopy (OGD) if normal colonoscopy
How is haematochezia managed?
95% of cases settle spontaneously
Unstable - urgent resuscitation
Reverse any anti-coagulation in unstable patients
Arterial embolisation - identified bleeding point
What is the first-line investigation in a haemodynamically unstable patient with haematochezia?
CT angiogram