Peptic ulcer disease

Revision as of 02:00, 1 August 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Background

  • Recurrent ulcerations in the stomach and proximal duodenum
  • Majority of cases related to H. pylori or NSAID use
    • H. pylori found in 30-40% of U.S. population
    • NSAIDs inhibit prostaglandin synthesis (decreases mucus and bicarb production)

Diagnosis

  • Burning epigastric pain
    • May awaken pt at night (gastric contents empty)
  • Abrupt onset of severe pain may indicate perforation
  • Abrupt onset of back pain may indicate penetration into the pancreas
  • The following symptoms are NOT associated w/ PUD:
    • Postprandial pain, food intolerance, nausea, retrosternal pain, belching

Work-Up

  1. CBC (r/o anemia)
  2. LFTs
  3. Lipase
  4. ?Acute abd series
  5. ?RUQ US
  6. ?ECG
  7. ?Troponin

Red Flags

Any of the following suggest endoscopy referral

  1. Age >55yr
  2. Unexplained weight loss
  3. Early satiety
  4. Persistent vomiting
  5. Dysphagia
  6. Anemia or GI bleeding
  7. Abdominal mass
  8. Persistent anorexia
  9. Jaundice

DDx

Abdominal Pain#Epigastric

Treatment

  1. Eradicate H. pylori if identified in symptomatic pt
    1. PPI + clarithromycin + (amoxicillin or metronidazole) x14d
  2. Stop NSAIDs
  3. PPI
    1. Generally heal ulcers faster than H2 blockers
    2. Omeprazole 20-40mg QD
  4. H2 Blockers
    1. Famotidine 20-40mg QD
    2. Ranitidine 75-150mg BID

Complications

  1. Hemorrhage
    1. Upper GI Bleeding
  2. Perforation
    1. Abrupt onset of severe epigastric pain
    2. Pts may not have history of ulcer-like sx
    3. Consult surgery
  3. Obstruction
    1. Occurs due to:
      1. Scarring of gastric outlet
      2. Edema due to active ulcer

See Also

Source

Tintinalli