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Management of gastrointestinal bleeding: Society of Abdominal Radiology (SAR) Institutional Survey

Authors :
Lisa L. Strate
Vijay Ramalingam
Mark Anderson
Flavius F. Guglielmo
Jorge A. Soto
Alvaro Huete
Brian C. Allen
Olga R. Brook
Michael S. Gee
Don C. Yoo
David J. Grand
Jeff L. Fidler
Seong Ho Park
Michael L. Wells
Ashish Khandalwal
Martin L. Gunn
Farnoosh Sokhandon
Avneesh Gupta
David H. Bruining
Source :
Abdominal Radiology. 47:2-12
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Despite guidelines developed to standardize the diagnosis and management of gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding, significant variability remains in recommendations and practice. The purpose of this survey was to obtain information on practice patterns for the evaluation of overt lower GI bleeding (LGIB) and suspected small bowel bleeding. A 34-question electronic survey was sent to all Society of Abdominal Radiology (SAR) members. Responses were received from 52 unique institutions (40 from the United States). Only 26 (50%) utilize LGIB management guidelines. 32 (62%) use CT angiography (CTA) for initial evaluation in unstable patients. In stable patients with suspected LGIB, CTA is the preferred initial exam at 21 (40%) versus colonoscopy at 24 (46%) institutions. CTA use increases after hours for both unstable (n = 32 vs. 35, 62% vs. 67%) and stable patients (n = 21 vs. 27, 40% vs 52%). CTA is required before conventional angiography for stable (n = 36, 69%) and unstable (n = 15, 29%) patients. 38 (73%) institutions obtain two post-contrast phases for CTA. 49 (94%) institutions perform CT enterography (CTE) for occult small bowel bleeding with capsule endoscopy (n = 26, 50%) and CTE (n = 21, 40%) being the initial test performed. 35 (67%) institutions perform multiphase CTE for occult small bowel bleeding. In summary, stable and unstable patients with overt lower GI are frequently imaged with CTA, while CTE is frequently performed for suspected occult small bowel bleeding.

Details

ISSN :
23660058 and 2366004X
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Abdominal Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0f468da2cfd43b36dd401678c5598f72