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Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-202510

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Acute gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding is a lifethreatening emergency that remains a common cause ofhospitalization worldwide. The aetiology of acute uppergastrointestinal bleed (UGIB) varies with each geographicalregion. Study aimed to analyse clinical profile, endoscopicprofile and in-hospital mortality in patients with acute uppergastrointestinal bleeding.Material and methods: This was a retrospective analysisconducted in a Tertiary care centre in Bangalore. In this studywe analysed the records of consecutive patients admitted withUpper Gastro-Intestinal bleeding over period of three yearsfrom January 2016 till January 2019.Results: We analysed two thirty consecutive patientsdiagnosed with acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding, 77.4%patients were males and 22.6% were females, mean age ofpresentation was 49.10 years. Most of the patients, oneseventy-three (75%) were between the age group of 31-70 years. Melena was the most common symptom 80.4%followed by hematemesis 47%. History of chronic alcoholintake was noted in ninety three (40.4%) and smoking in sixtyfive (28.3%), medication history depicted that sixteen (6.92%)patients were on NSAIDS; fifteen (6.49%) patients were onanti-platelet drugs, five (2.1%) patients were on steroids, one(0.4%) patient was on Newer Oral Anti Coagulants.Conclusion: The present study reported peptic ulcer diseaseas the most common cause of upper GI bleeding, followedby portal hypertension related bleeding. The most commonendoscopic lesions reported were esophageal varices,followed by duodenal ulcer. Upper G.I endoscopy is animportant modality in both diagnosis and therapy in upperG.I bleed, concomitant medical and Endoscopic therapy mayreduce mortality, morbidity and also the need for surgery/interventional radiology assisted haemostasis.

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