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PGY1 MICU 211
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Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis12 Topics|2 Quizzes
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DVT Prophylaxis10 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Hyperglycemic Crisis: Diabetic Ketoacidosis and Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic Syndrome11 Topics|3 Quizzes
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Introduction to Shock and Hemodynamics5 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Sepsis11 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Post-Intubation Sedation8 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Diagnostic Approach
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Endoscopy is the definitive method to diagnose stress ulceration, but is often not feasible in unstable ICU patients.
Diagnosis of stress ulceration is usually presumptive based on:
- Clinical presentation – hematemesis, coffee ground emesis, melena, hematochezia, unexplained anemia, hypotension
- Presence of major risk factors – mechanical ventilation >48 hours, coagulopathy, trauma, sepsis, organ failure
- Exclusion of other potential bleeding sources
Testing:
- Complete blood count – unexplained drop in hemoglobin/hematocrit
- Stool guaiac testing
- Gastric aspirate testing
- Limited role for routine endoscopy given diffuse nature of lesions and risk in unstable patients
- Endoscopy is useful when the bleeding source is unclear or a treatable lesion is suspected
- Biopsies are not useful for diagnosis