Treatment
Approximately 80 per cent of patients presenting with gastrointestinal hemorrhage will stop bleeding spontaneously. In such cases, management is directed toward prevention of further bleeding by either medical or surgical treatment. Thus, following bleeding from a duodenal ulcer, treatment with antacids, sucralfate, or an H2-re-ception blocker is often initiated. Conservative management is usually undertaken in cases of gastritis, Mallory-Weiss tears, angiodysplasia, or div-erticulosis in which bleeding ceases spontaneously. On the other hand, malignant lesions and polyps are resected either surgically or endoscopically when possible. If bleeding does not cease or recurs, further management will depend upon the site and nature of the lesion as well as upon the assessed ability of the patient to withstand surgery. For example, most cases of peptic ulcer that fail to cease bleeding will require urgent surgery.
Several nonsurgical techniques for arresting gastrointestinal hemorrhage have been widely used, although their role is far from clear. These include radiological procedures such as intra-ar-terial infusion of vasopressin, a powerful vasoconstrictor, and selective embolization of bleeding arterial foci. Endoscopic electrocoagulation and laser photocoagulation are also becoming increasingly used, particularly for elderly, poor-risk patients with angiodysplastic lesions.
Variceal hemorrhage requires special consideration. Most patients with variceal bleeding are poor operative candidates and run a high risk of rebleeding. Additional precautions and supportive measures are required in these patients, as bleeding may precipitate hepatic encephalopathy while renal function may deteriorate rapidly . Cleansing of blood from the bowel using enemas as well as administration of lactulose helps to lessen the risk of encephalopathy. Volume should be replaced using blood or blood products, with care taken to avoid overtransfu-sion, which can worsen variceal bleeding. Since these patients often retain sodium and water avidly, infusion of large volumes of saline shouldbe avoided as far as possible, as this will invariably aggravate ascites. Initial measures to arrest hemorrhage nonoperatively include intravenous infusion of vasopressin (which is as effective as, but safer than, infra-arterial administration) and clotting factor replacement, usually in the form of fresh frozen plasma and platelets. Balloon tamponade is resorted to when bleeding fails to cease, but it is often only a temporary measure. Currently, continued bleeding is usually treated by endoscopic injection of the varices with sclerosant solutions (sclerotherapy), which is successful in arresting bleeding in up to 90 per cent of cases. Emergency decompression of the portal system by means of portosystemic shunt surgery is, at times, the only means for arresting acute variceal hemorrhage. Prevention of recurrent bleeding from varices may be achieved through either repeated endoscopic sclerotherapy or elective portosystemic shunt surgery.
- Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
- Sigmoidoscopy and Colonoscopy
- Verapamil
- CLINICAL AMD LABORATORY FEATURES
- Gardner's Syndrome
- PULMOIIARY FUNCTION EVALUATION
- Urinary Tract Obstruction
- MECHANISMS OF ARRHYTHMOGENESIS
- Disopyramide
- CHARACTERISTICS OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- Initial Assessment
- CONTROL OF BREATHING IN DISEASE STATES
- POLYPS OF THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT
- GLOMERULAR DISEASE
- LIMITATION OF MFARCT SIZE
- CARCINOMA OF THE PANCREAS - Definition
- Outcomes of Dialysis
- Pulmonary Hemorrhagic Disorders
- CLINICAL TESTS OF DIGESTION AND ABSORPTION
- Clinical Presentation
- Urinary Tract Infection
- EFFECTS OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION ON PULMONARY FUNCTION
- ACUTE RENAL INSUFFICIENCY
- CARDIAC DEVELOPMENT
- PROGNOSIS
- PRE-EXCITATIOIi SYNDROMES
- Women’s Health Program
- PULMONARY HEART DISEASE
- Diagnosis
- Lower GI Bleeding
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- SPECIFIC CAUSES OF CIRRHOSIS
- GASTROESOPHAGEAL REFLUX DISEASE
- GROSS ANATOMY
- MYOCARDIAL DISEASE - MYOCARDITIS