PEDIATRICS Vol. 102 No. 4 October 1998, pp. 933-938
Received Dec 23, 1997; accepted Apr 21, 1998.
From the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Department of Pediatrics, Sainte-Justine Hospital, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada.
Objectives. To determine the incidence, risk factors, and complications associated with or attributable to clinically significant upper gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding acquired in a pediatric intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods. Prospective, descriptive epidemiologic study in a multidisciplinary pediatric ICU of a tertiary-care university hospital. Upper GI bleeding was considered to be present if hematemesis occurred or blood was present in the gastric tube. An upper GI bleed was qualified as clinically significant if two or three reviewers independently assessed that at least one of the six complications considered for analysis was attributable to the upper GI bleed.
Results. A cohort of 1114 consecutive admissions was
enrolled; 108 (9.7%) were excluded mostly (37.0%) because they
already had an upper GI bleed at entry to the pediatric ICU. The final
sample included 1006 admissions (881 patients); 103 upper GI bleeds
(10.2%) were diagnosed, including 16 clinically significant upper GI
bleeds (1.6%). Complications attributed to an upper GI bleed included: decreased hemoglobin concentration (10 cases), transfusion (10), hypotension (3), and surgery (1). Three independent risk factors for
clinically significant upper GI bleeding were retained by multivariate
analysis: respiratory failure, coagulopathy, and pediatric risk of
mortality score
10. Nine of the 16 cases (56.3%) with clinically
significant upper GI bleeding had three risk factors, 14 (87.5%) had
two, and 1 (6.3%) had none.
Conclusions. Clinically significant upper GI bleeds are rare in critically ill children. Prophylaxis to prevent them may be limited to patients who present with at least two risk factors. Key words: critical care, intensive care unit, pediatric, gastrointestinal bleeding, risk factors, stress ulceration.
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