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Hematemesis Information

Hematemesis or haematemesis is the vomiting of blood. The source is generally the upper gastrointestinal tract. Patients can easily confuse it with hemoptysis (coughing up blood), although the latter is more common.

Contents

Signs

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Causes

Causes can be:

Management

Hematemesis is treated as a medical emergency. The most vital distinction is whether there is blood loss sufficient to cause shock.

Minimal blood loss

If this is not the case, the patient is generally administered a proton pump inhibitor (e.g. omeprazole), given blood transfusions (if the level of hemoglobin is extremely low, that is less than 8.0 g/dL or 4.5–5.0 mmol/L), and kept NPO, which stands for "nil per os" (Latin for "nothing by mouth", or no eating or drinking) until endoscopy can be arranged. Adequate venous access (large-bore cannulas or a central venous catheter) is generally obtained in case the patient suffers a further bleed and becomes unstable.

Significant blood loss

In a "hemodynamically significant" case of hematemesis, that is hypovolemic shock, resuscitation is an immediate priority to prevent cardiac arrest. Fluids and/or blood is administered, preferably by central venous catheter, and the patient is prepared for emergency endoscopy, which is typically done in theatres. Surgical opinion is usually sought in case the source of bleeding cannot be identified endoscopically, and laparotomy is necessary. Securing the airway is a top priority in hematemesis patients, especially those with a disturbed conscious level (hepatic encephalopathy in oesophageal varices patient.) A cuffed endotracheal tube could be a life saving choice.

See also

External links

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Digestive system · Digestive disease · Gastroenterology (primarily K20–K93, 530–579)
Upper GI tract
Esophagus Esophagitis (Candidal, Herpetiform) · Rupture (Boerhaave syndrome, Mallory-Weiss syndrome) · UES (Zenker's diverticulum) · LES (Barrett's esophagus) · Esophageal motility disorder (Nutcracker esophagus, Achalasia, Diffuse esophageal spasm, Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)) · Laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) · Esophageal stricture · Megaesophagus
Stomach Gastritis (Atrophic, Ménétrier's disease, Gastroenteritis) · Peptic (gastric) ulcer (Cushing ulcer, Dieulafoy's lesion) · Dyspepsia · Pyloric stenosis · Achlorhydria · Gastroparesis · Gastroptosis · Portal hypertensive gastropathy · Gastric antral vascular ectasia · Gastric dumping syndrome · Gastric volvulus
Lower GI tract: Intestinal/ Enteropathy
Small intestine (Duodenum/Jejunum/Ileum) Enteritis (Duodenitis, Jejunitis, Ileitis) — Peptic (duodenal) ulcer (Curling's ulcer) — Malabsorption: Coeliac · Tropical sprue · Blind loop syndrome · Small bowel bacterial overgrowth syndrome · Whipple's · Short bowel syndrome · Steatorrhea · Milroy disease · bile acid malabsorption
Large intestine (Appendix/Colon) Appendicitis · Colitis (Pseudomembranous, Ulcerative, Ischemic, Microscopic, Collagenous, Lymphocytic) · Functional colonic disease (IBS, Intestinal pseudoobstruction / Ogilvie syndrome) — Megacolon / Toxic megacolon · Diverticulitis/Diverticulosis
Large and/or small Enterocolitis (Necrotizing) · IBD (Crohn's disease) — Vascular: Abdominal angina · Mesenteric ischemia · AngiodysplasiaBowel obstruction: Ileus · Intussusception · Volvulus · Fecal impactionConstipation · Diarrhea (Infectious) · Intestinal adhesions
Rectum Proctitis (Radiation proctitis) · Proctalgia fugax · Rectal prolapse · Anismus
Anal canal Anal fissure/Anal fistula · Anal abscess · Anal dysplasia · Pruritus ani
GI bleeding/BIS Upper (Hematemesis, Melena) · Lower (Hematochezia)
Accessory
Liver Hepatitis (Viral hepatitis, Autoimmune hepatitis, Alcoholic hepatitis) · Cirrhosis (PBC) · Fatty liver (NASH) · Vascular (Budd-Chiari syndrome, Hepatic veno-occlusive disease, Portal hypertension, Nutmeg liver) · Alcoholic liver disease · Liver failure (Hepatic encephalopathy, Acute liver failure) · Liver abscess (Pyogenic, Amoebic) · Hepatorenal syndrome · Peliosis hepatis
Gallbladder Cholecystitis · Gallstones/Cholecystolithiasis · Cholesterolosis · Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses · Postcholecystectomy syndrome · Porcelain gallbladder
Bile duct/ Other biliary tree Cholangitis (PSC, Secondary sclerosing cholangitis, Ascending) · Cholestasis/Mirizzi's syndrome · Biliary fistula · Haemobilia · Gallstones/Cholelithiasis Common bile duct (Choledocholithiasis, Biliary dyskinesia) · Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction
Pancreatic Pancreatitis (Acute, Chronic, Hereditary, Pancreatic abscess) · Pancreatic pseudocyst · Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency · Pancreatic fistula
Abdominopelvic
Hernia Diaphragmatic (Congenital) · Hiatus Inguinal (Indirect, Direct) · Umbilical · Femoral · Obturator · Spigelian Lumbar (Petit's, Grynfeltt-Lesshaft) Undefined location (Incisional · Internal hernia)
Peritoneal Peritonitis (Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis) · Hemoperitoneum · Pneumoperitoneum

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