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Variceal bleeding

From Surgopaedia

Bleeding varices

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Principles of managing UGIB secondary to varices

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    • Resuscitate and institute medical management as below - may need to secure airway in an encephalopathic patient
    • Bleeding stops spontaneously in about half of patients - less likely to stop in CP-C cirrhosis or if HVPG > 20mmHg
    • Endoscopy immediately post-resus if unstable, within 24 hours otherwise (UK consensus guidelines 2013)
    • Consider TIPS in the acute setting if necessary - especially for gastric varices, as they are harder to treat endoscopically
    • Surgical shunt is also an option if all else fails

Medical management

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    • IV ceftriaxone (decreases infection rate, re-bleeding, and improves survival)
    • Octreotide infusion (reduces variceal flow) - initial bolus 50mcg then 50mcg/hr, which is continued for 2-5 days
    • Aim Hb 70-90 - any higher actually increases portal pressure and risks more bleeding, with higher 6-week mortality
    • Attempt INR < 2 and platelets >50,000
    • May need to be discharged on propanolol? Probably no need for PPI
    • If ascites, they may need spironolactone
    • In severe bleeding, vasopressin infusions can decrease splanchnic flow (need to also give nitroglycerin to ameliorate systemic effects)
    • Luminal tamponade - Sengstaken-Blakemore tube works 90% of the time, but recurs 50% of the time when tamponade is released
      • Really should only be done to an intubated patient
      • Test the integrity of the balloons prior to insertion
      • Insert orally, stop at 50cm
      • Inflate the gastric balloon with saline to 200-250mL, stopping and readjusting if there is resistance (ideally stop after 50mL and confirm gastric position with XR)
      • Apply about 1kg traction using an IVF bag on a pole
      • After 10 minutes, use the gastric suction and accessory NGT to evaluate for bleeding below and above the balloon respectively
      • Stop and see if the patient stabilises - in most cases (Schein) the oesophageal balloon isn't needed. If needed due to ongoing bleeding, inflate to 30-45mm Hg.
      • If the patient still doesn't stabilise, take it out and repeat the endoscopy or do a CT
      • Must be removed within 24-36 hours of placement

Initial endoscopic management (works in 85%)

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    • Should be intubated
    • Look for active bleeding vs stigmata of bleeding (red wale markings, nipple sign, cherry red spots, overlying clot)
    • Options for treatment
      • Endoscopic band ligation is gold standard
      • Sclerotherapy is next best
        • Sclerotherapy more useful for gastric varices - inject cyanoacrylate polymer or morrhuate sodium or ethanolamine - complicated by non-specific chest pain in 10% of patients
        • Cyanoacrylate process: inject 1-2ml directly into varix then 1ml flush of sterile water
        • Embolisation is most dreaded complication - <1% of patients
      • Glue
      • Thrombin injection
      • Placement of self-expanding metal stent can be used for refractory bleeds as a bridge to TIPS
    • Gastric varices
      • GOV1 (both oesophagus and lesser curvature of stomach) should be treated same as oesophageal varices
      • Isolated gastric varices from splenic vein thrombosis should not be treated solely endoscopically - needs splenectomy - see separate topic

Failed endoscopy/pharmacotherapy

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    • Sengstaken-Blakemore tube, continue resuscitation in ICU, and return to re-trial endoscopy in 24 hours
    • TIPS

Recurrent bleeding after initial control

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    • Highest risk for recurrence within the first few days
    • CP-A/B: surgical shunt - see separate varices topic
    • CP-C: TIPS - see separate varices topic

Post-op management

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    • If banding has been done, they may need repeat banding in a fortnight until varices obliterated
    • Keep NBM until the next day, followed by soft diet for 24 hours, then normal diet
    • See separate 'varices' topic under UGIS for long-term medical management

Prognosis

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    • Mortality currently is around 10-20% at 6 weeks
    • Mortality closely related to hepatic functional reserve - mortality >50% in CP-C in some sources.