Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel...

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Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer

Transcript of Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel...

Page 1: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Lower GI Bleeding

Dr. Thamer

Page 2: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• LGI Bleeding :– Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the

bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz.

– 95% from the colon .– Up to 40% of patients with lower GI bleeding,

more than one potential source of hemorrhage is identified.

Page 3: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Overt GI bleeding the presence of hematemesis, melena, or hematochezia.

• Occult GI the absence of overt bleeding and is identified on laboratory tests (e.g., iron-deficiency anemia) or examination of the stool (e.g., positive guaiac test).

• Obscure GI bleeding no source has been identified by routine endoscopic studies (EGD and colonoscopy).

• Obscure GI bleeding is occult in 20% of cases.

Page 4: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• The basic components of management are1. initial hemodynamic stabilization, 2. Localization of the bleeding site, and3. Site-specific therapeutic intervention.

Page 5: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Initial Evaluation and Resuscitation

• Two large-bore peripheral IV catheters should be inserted and isotonic I.V. fluid administered.

• A Foley catheter should be placed to facilitate monitoring of intravascular volume status.

Page 6: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Whether and in what form to administer blood products is determined on an individual basis, with appropriate weight given to the presence or absence of comorbid conditions, the rate of blood loss, and the degree of hemodynamic stability.

• ICU monitoring in pt with HD instability .

Page 7: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Focused Hx and physical Ex , to be carried out simultaneously with resuscitation. – nature and duration of bleeding, associated

symptoms, past medical history, complicating comorbid conditions, medications

– postural vital signs, complete abdominal exam. – laboratory tests (CBC, serum electrolytes,

coagulation profile, and typing and cross matching).• Place NG tube for gastric lavage.

Page 8: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• If lavage yields positive results (i.e., the aspirate

contains gross blood or coffee grounds),UGI scope. • An aspirate that contains copious amounts of

bile is strongly suggestive of a lower GI source.• The choice is less clear-cut with a clear

aspirate. • In the absence of bile, such an aspirate cannot

rule out a duodenal source for the bleeding.

Page 9: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

So , depending on the overall clinical picture, the surgeon may choose either to perform EGD to

rule out a duodenal bleeding source or to proceed with colonoscopy on the assumption

that the source of the bleeding is in the lower GI tract.

Page 10: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Investigative Studies

• colonoscopy ,• radionuclide scanning, • CT scan, and • angiography (in the form of selective

mesenteric arteriography). – The goal of these tests is to locate the site of

bleeding accurately so that definitive therapy can be properly directed.

Page 11: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Which diagnostic test is chosen for a specific patient depends on several factors, including – the hemodynamic stability of the patient, – the bleeding rate, – the comorbid conditions present, and – the local expertise available at the physician’s

hospital.

Page 12: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Colonoscopy

• Most appropriate in the setting of minimal to moderate bleeding

• Major hemorrhage interferes significantly with visualization, and the diagnostic yield is low. – In addition, the unstable patient, sedation and

manipulation may be associated with additional complications and can interfere with resuscitation.

• Although the blood is cathartic, gentle preparation with polyethylene glycol, either orally or through an NG tube, can improve visualization.

Page 13: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• If the entire colon has been adequately visualized and no source for the bleeding has been identified, the ileum should be intubated; fresh blood in this region suggests a possible small bowel source. – although this can be misleading because of

retrograde peristalsis in the colon.

Page 14: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Overall diagnostic yields ranging from 53% to 97%.

• An average complication rate of 0.5%.• Colonoscopy has both a higher diagnostic

yield and a lower complication rate than arteriography in this setting and thus would appear to be a more attractive initial test in most circumstances.

Page 15: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• If no active bleeding is observed in the ileum, upper GI endoscopy should be performed to rule out an upper GI bleeding site.

• When colonoscopy and routine upper GI endoscopy fail to locate a bleeding source, push enteroscopy may be helpful.

• It can be performed purely endoscopically with a pediatric colonoscope .

Page 16: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• In the OR during exploratory laparotomy. • The surgeon can manually “milk” the small

bowel over the scope to evaluate its distal portion or through an enterotomy and the scope can be passed in both a retrograde and an antegrade fashion .

Page 17: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Radionuclide Scanning

• Two imaging tracers, both labeled with technetium-99m (99mTc), are currently available for radionuclide scanning in this setting:– 99mTc-labeled sulfur colloid (99mTc-SC) and – 99mTc-labeled red blood cells (RBCs).

Page 18: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• 99mTc-SC – requires no preparation time and can be injected

immediately into the patient;– Its rapid absorption into the liver and the spleen

can often hinder accurate localization of overlying bleeding sites.

Page 19: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• 99mTc-labeled RBCs. – Requires some preparation time, – Longer half-life than 99mTc-SC does, – Not taken up by the liver and spleen, and – It can be detected on images as long as 24 to 48

hours after injection .

Page 20: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• 99mTc-labeled RBCs is the most sensitive but least accurate method for localization of GI bleeding.

• The patient's own RBCs are labeled and re injected.

• The labeled blood is extravasated into the GI tract lumen, creating a focus that can be detected scintigraphically.

Page 21: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Initially, images are collected frequently and then at 4 hour intervals for up to 24 hours.

• The tagged RBC scan can detect bleeding as slow as 0.1 mL/min and is reported to be more than 90% sensitivity.

Page 22: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Accuracy of localization is in the range of only 40% to 60%, and it is particularly inaccurate in distinguishing right- from left-sided colonic bleeding.

Page 23: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• The RBC scan is not usually employed as a definitive study before surgery but instead as a guide to the utility of angiography; – if the RBC scan is negative or only positive after

several hours, angiography is unlikely to be revealing.

• Such an approach avoids the significant morbidity of the angiogram.

Page 24: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY

• CT scanners were able to detect arterial bleeding at rates as low as 0.07 ml/min, which suggests that CT scanning is more sensitive than angiography for this purpose.

• In addition, CT scans are noninvasive and carry little morbidity.

• Unfortunately, like radionuclide scanning, CT has no therapeutic capability & the use of CT in this setting is the excessive dye load if angiography is employed as well.

Page 25: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Mesenteric Angiography

• Can detect hemorrhage in the range of 0.5 to 1.0 mL/min and is generally only employed in the diagnosis of ongoing hemorrhage.

• It can be particularly useful in identifying the vascular patterns of angiodysplasias or localizing actively bleeding diverticula.

• It has therapeutic capability .

Page 26: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Catheter-directed vasopressin infusion can provide temporary control of bleeding, permitting hemodynamic stabilization .

• It can also be employed for embolization.

Page 27: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Infusion of vasopressin is initiated at a rate of 0.2 U/min and can be increased to a rate of 0.4 U/min.

• Within 20 to 30 minutes, another angiogram is performed to determine whether the bleeding has ceased. – If the bleeding is under control, the catheter is left in place and

vasopressin is continuously infused for 6 to 12 hours.– If the bleeding continues to be controlled, infusion is continued

for an additional 6 to 12 hours at 50% of the previous rate.– Finally, vasopressin infusion is replaced by continuous saline

infusion, and if bleeding does not recur, the catheter is removed.

Page 28: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Systemic side effects, including myocardial ischemia, peripheral ischemia, hypertension, dysrhythmias, mesenteric thrombosis, intestinal infarction, and death.

• Occasionally, simultaneous I.V. administration of nitroglycerin is necessary to counteract these systemic effects.

Page 29: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• The reported success rate of vasopressin in controlling lower GI bleeding ranges from 60% to 100%, and the incidence of major complications ranges from 10% to 20%.

• 50% of patients experience re bleeding when the medication is discontinued.

Page 30: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Typically, such therapy is reserved for patients whose underlying condition precludes surgical therapy.

• Unfortunately, angiography is associated with a significant risk for complications, including hematomas, arterial thrombosis, contrast reactions, and acute renal failure.

Page 31: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• An alternative for patients with coronary vascular disease, severe peripheral vascular disease, or other comorbidities that prevent safe administration of vasopressin is transcatheter embolization.

• In this technique, a catheter is superselectively placed into the identified bleeding vessel and an embolizing agent (e.g., a gelatin sponge, a microcoil, polyvinyl alcohol particles, or a balloon) is injected.

Page 32: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

Operative Therapy

• Surgical intervention should be considered a last resort in patients with LGIB.

• It is reserved for patients with – persistent hemodynamic instability despite

aggressive resuscitation, – the need for four or more blood transfusions in 24

hours or 10 units overall, or– in the setting of recurrent severe bleeding.

Page 33: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Operative intervention during the same hospitalization in these situations is associated with a better long-term outcome.

• Surgical evaluation may entail exploratory laparotomy alone or combined with intraoperative enteroscopy to evaluate the small bowel, isolating a short segment at a time.

Page 34: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Operative management of LGIB has long been a controversial subject.

• What is clear is that blind segmental resection based on clinical suspicion alone has an unacceptably high rate of rebleeding and should not be performed.

Page 35: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• There is an emerging consensus that with successful preoperative localization of bleeding, segmental intestinal resection may be considered with the understanding that it bears a higher risk of rebleeding (0% to 14%) than subtotal colectomy (0% to 4%).

• Subtotal colectomy, however, carries a higher risk of intractable diarrhea.

Page 36: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• While LGIB resolves on its own in 80% of cases, it recurs in 25% of cases.

• After a patient’s second major bleeding episode, prophylactic resection is usually recommended (assuming the site has been localized), because the risk of rebleeding increases and exceeds 50% after the second episode.

• Risk factors for rebleeding include severity of the first bleed, major medical comorbidities, and the need for anticoagulation.

Page 37: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• All patients require an open laparotomy with a thorough examination of the entire intestine.

• Start with inspection , If the colon visually appears filled with blood and the small intestine remains spared, the surgeon must still examine the entire abdomen and then focus on colonic sources of bleeding.

Page 38: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Exploration :– The exploration begins in the stomach,

duodenum, and considers possible missed upper gastrointestinal sources.

– Next, the small intestine must undergo examination from the ligament of Treitz to the ileocecal valve.

– Palpation of the intestine may demonstrate such etiologies as a Meckel’s diverticulum, ileitis, colitis, or a GIST.

Page 39: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• If no source appears obvious, the surgeon may consider intestinal enteroscopy.

• The enteroscope or colonoscope will expose the luminal surface and transilluminate the intestinal wall for occult lesions.

• Transillumination may identify vascular anomalies, small ulcers or tumors.

• Endoscopic access to the intestine may require upper enteroscope, a transgastric approach, a transcolonic approach, or insertion through the anus .

Page 40: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• Once a hemorrhage site is identified, the surgeon can perform an appropriate segmental resection.

Page 41: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• If the source of bleeding cannot be found, and it appears to arise from the colon, the surgeon should perform a subtotal or total colectomy.

• Stable patients will tolerate a primary ileosigmoid or ileorectal anastomosis in this circumstance.

• Unstable patients require an end ileostomy with closure of the rectal stump or a mucous fistula.

Page 42: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.

• The rectum and sigmoid colon require reexamination endoscopically to assure no bleeding persists.

• Before the endoscopy, a simple saline “washout” with a transanal catheter or via the rigid proctosigmoidoscope may provide for safe passage and careful examination of the remaining mucosa.

Page 43: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.
Page 44: Lower GI Bleeding Dr. Thamer. LGI Bleeding : – Abnormal hemorrhage into the lumen of the bowel from a source distal to the ligament of Treitz. – 95% from.