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Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding (UGIB)
Upper GI bleeding is one of the most common and high-risk gastro emergencies encountered in the NHS. It ranges from mild self-limiting bleeds to life-threatening haemorrhage requiring urgent escalation.
This guide focuses on what doctors actually need to know on the ward and on-call.
What counts as UGIB?
Bleeding from anywhere proximal to the ligament of Treitz (oesophagus, stomach, duodenum).
Typical presentations:
- Haematemesis (fresh blood or coffee-ground vomit)
- Melaena
- Syncope / dizziness
- Anaemia with no obvious source
- Shock in severe cases
Common causes (think practically)
You don’t need a long textbook list — you need patterns.
Most common:
- Peptic ulcer disease (gastric or duodenal)
- Gastritis / oesophagitis
- Mallory–Weiss tear
- Varices (in cirrhosis)
- Malignancy
On the ward, always ask:
Does this patient have chronic liver disease?
Because variceal bleeding changes everything.
First priority = Assess stability
Before thinking about diagnosis, always assess:
- Airway (is the patient protecting it?)
- Breathing
- Circulation
- BP
- HR
- Cap refill
- Mental state
- Urine output
Red flags:
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension
- Confusion
- Ongoing haematemesis
- Hb dropping rapidly
These patients need urgent escalation.
Immediate management on the ward (what juniors should actually do)
If you’re the doctor called to see a suspected UGIB:
Do immediately:
- A–E assessment
- 2 wide-bore cannulas
- Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFTs, coagulation, group & save
- Crossmatch if concern about significant bleed
- IV fluids if hypotensive
- Keep patient nil by mouth
- Start PPI (e.g. IV omeprazole)
If liver disease suspected:
- Start terlipressin
- Start IV antibiotics (e.g. ceftriaxone)
- Early gastro involvement
When to escalate
You should escalate urgently if:
- Ongoing haematemesis
- Haemodynamic instability
- Hb falling quickly
- Known cirrhosis
- NEWS ≥5
- Concerned nursing staff
These patients often need:
- Urgent endoscopy
- HDU/ICU
- Senior review
Never sit on a sick bleeder.
Endoscopy timing (realistic NHS practice)
- Stable patient → endoscopy within 24 hours
- Unstable / high-risk → endoscopy urgently after resuscitation
- Variceal bleed → as soon as possible
Endoscopy is both diagnostic and therapeutic.
Variceal vs non-variceal (important conceptually)
You don’t need to memorise lists — just understand the logic.
Variceal bleed:
- Portal hypertension
- High risk of rebleeding
- Needs terlipressin, antibiotics, urgent scope
Non-variceal bleed (e.g. ulcer):
- Acid-related or mucosal disease
- Managed with PPI + endoscopic therapy
Different mechanism → different management.
What juniors often miss (important learning points)
- Delaying escalation in unstable patients
- Forgetting antibiotics in suspected variceal bleed
- Not checking coagulation
- Underestimating melaena (“they look fine”)
- Not documenting haemodynamic trends
UGIB patients can deteriorate suddenly.
Take-home concept
UGIB is not about memorising causes.
It’s about recognising severity early, stabilising well, and escalating appropriately.