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Essentials of Diagnosis
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Hematemesis; usually self-limited
Prior history of vomiting, retching in 50%
Endoscopy establishes diagnosis
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General Considerations
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Characterized by a nonpenetrating mucosal tear at the gastroesophageal junction
Events that suddenly raise transabdominal pressure, such as lifting, retching, or vomiting, may be contributory
Alcohol use disorder is a strong predisposing factor
Accounts for ~5% of upper gastrointestinal bleeding
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History of vomiting, retching, straining in 50%
Hematemesis with or without melena
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Differential Diagnosis
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OTHER CAUSES OF HEMATEMESIS
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Hemoptysis
Erosive esophagitis
Peptic ulcer disease
Esophageal or gastric varices
Erosive gastritis, eg, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, alcohol, stress
Portal hypertensive gastropathy
Vascular ectasias (angiodysplasias)
Gastric cancer
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Aortoenteric fistula
Dieulafoy lesion (aberrant gastric submucosal artery)
Hemobilia (blood in biliary tree), eg, iatrogenic, malignancy
Pancreatic cancer
Hemosuccus pancreaticus (pancreatic pseudoaneurysm)
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Complete blood count
Platelet count
Prothrombin time
Partial thromboplastin time
Serum creatinine
Liver enzymes and serologies
Type and cross-matching for 2–4 units or more of packed red blood cells
Hematocrit is not a reliable indicator of the severity of acute bleeding
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Diagnostic Procedures
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Therapeutic Procedures
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Patients are initially treated as needed with fluid resuscitation and blood transfusions
Most patients stop bleeding spontaneously and require no therapy
Endoscopic hemostatic therapy is used in patients who have continuing active bleeding
Injection with epinephrine (1:10,000), cautery with a bipolar or heater probe coagulation device, or mechanical compression of the artery by application of an endoclip or band is effective in 90–95% of cases
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