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Apex Nursing

Guide — Gastrointestinal

Lower GI Bleeding

Lower GI bleeding (LGIB) originates distal to the ligament of Treitz — small bowel, colon, rectum, or anus. It most commonly presents as hematochezia and is the leading cause of GI bleeding in adults over 50.

11 min read · Gastrointestinal

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Clinical decisions require licensed professional judgment and institutional protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Common Causes

CauseKey Features
DiverticulosisMost common cause in adults >50. Outpouchings of colonic wall. Painless, large-volume bleeding. Usually stops spontaneously.
Colorectal cancerOccult or bright red blood. Associated with weight loss, change in bowel habits, iron deficiency anemia. Risk increases >50 years.
AngiodysplasiaVascular malformations in colon. Associated with older adults, aortic stenosis, von Willebrand disease. Recurrent intermittent bleeding.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. Associated with diarrhea, cramping, mucus in stool, systemic symptoms.
Ischemic colitisReduced blood flow to colon (splenic flexure most vulnerable). Presents with sudden crampy pain then hematochezia. Common in elderly.
HemorrhoidsMost common cause of rectal bleeding overall. Bright red blood on toilet paper or in bowl. Usually non-massive. Internal hemorrhoids are painless.
Anal fissureTear in anal canal. Painful bright red bleeding with defecation. Associated with constipation and low-fiber diet.
PolypsPrecancerous lesions. May cause occult or minor bleeding. Detected and removed at colonoscopy.

Hematochezia

Hematochezia — bright red or maroon blood per rectum — is the hallmark presentation of lower GI bleeding. The color and character of rectal bleeding provides important clues to the source.

Blood AppearanceLikely SourceExamples
Bright red blood on toilet paperAnorectal (most distal)Hemorrhoids, anal fissure
Bright red blood in toilet bowlRectum or distal colonInternal hemorrhoids, rectal cancer, polyp
Bright red blood mixed with stoolSigmoid or descending colonDiverticulosis, IBD, angiodysplasia
Maroon-colored stoolRight colon or small bowelCecal diverticulosis, angiodysplasia, Meckel's diverticulum
Blood + mucusInflammatory processIBD, infectious colitis, colorectal cancer
Melena (black tarry)Upper GI (or right colon)PUD, esophageal varices — rule out upper GI source first

Assessment Findings

Hemodynamic stability is the top priority. Most LGIB patients are more stable than UGIB patients — but large-volume diverticular or angiodysplastic bleeds can be life-threatening.

Vital Signs

  • Tachycardia is first sign of volume loss
  • Hypotension = massive hemorrhage
  • Orthostatic hypotension = significant blood loss
  • Fever suggests inflammatory or infectious etiology

GI History

  • Bowel habit changes (cancer)
  • Pain + diarrhea (IBD)
  • Painless bleeding (diverticulosis, hemorrhoids)
  • Tenesmus — rectal irritation, IBD, cancer

Associated Symptoms

  • Unintentional weight loss (cancer)
  • Abdominal cramping before hematochezia (ischemic colitis)
  • Anal pain with defecation (anal fissure)
  • Family history of colon cancer or polyps

Laboratory

  • CBC: hemoglobin, hematocrit (may lag 6–24 hrs)
  • BMP: renal function, electrolytes
  • Coagulation studies: PT/INR, aPTT (bleeding risk)
  • BUN normal or low (vs elevated in UGIB)

Diagnostic Workup

TestPurposePriority
Upper endoscopy (EGD) firstRule out massive UGIB presenting as hematocheziaFirst if hemodynamically unstable or UGIB suspected
ColonoscopyGold standard for LGIB — identifies source in 70–90% of cases, allows therapeutic interventionUrgent (within 24 hrs) for active or significant bleed
CT angiography (CTA)Detects active bleeding ≥0.3 mL/min. Non-invasive. Guides IR embolization.For active, rapid hemorrhage — can precede colonoscopy
Tagged RBC scan (nuclear medicine)Detects active bleeding ≥0.1 mL/min. Less specific than CTA.When CTA negative but bleeding suspected
Capsule endoscopySmall bowel evaluation (Crohn's, obscure bleeding)After negative upper and lower endoscopy
Anoscopy/proctoscopyDirect visualization of anorectal areaFor isolated anorectal bleeding (hemorrhoids, fissure)

Treatment Overview

1

Hemodynamic resuscitation

Two large-bore IVs. IV fluid resuscitation. Transfuse pRBCs for Hgb <7 (or <8 in cardiac disease). Correct coagulopathy with FFP, platelets, vitamin K as indicated. Activate massive transfusion protocol if massive hemorrhage.

2

Rule out upper GI source

Place NGT — if bilious return (no blood), upper GI source less likely. If clinical suspicion for UGIB, perform EGD first before colonoscopy. BUN elevation suggests upper GI source. NG lavage is controversial but sometimes used.

3

Endoscopic management

Colonoscopy: hemostasis via epinephrine injection, thermal coagulation, clips, or banding for bleeding lesion. Most effective when performed urgently after adequate bowel prep. Polyp removal (polypectomy) for bleeding polyps.

4

Angiographic embolization (Interventional Radiology)

For active bleeding not amenable to endoscopic control. CTA or tagged RBC scan guides catheter placement. Super-selective embolization reduces ischemia risk. Success rate 85–90% for acute diverticular bleed.

5

Surgery

Reserved for refractory bleeding (failed endoscopic and IR therapy), hemodynamic instability requiring massive transfusion, or known cancer requiring resection. Segmental colectomy preferred over subtotal colectomy when source localized.

Nursing Priorities

Assess hemodynamic stability — vitals every 15 minutes

Tachycardia is the earliest sign of significant blood loss. Orthostatic hypotension (drop ≥20 mmHg sitting to standing) indicates ≥500 mL volume loss. Notify provider for any hemodynamic change.

Establish IV access and draw labs

Two large-bore peripheral IVs. CBC, BMP, coagulation panel, type & screen. Communicate blood type and crossmatch status with blood bank. Anticipate transfusion.

Accurate characterization and documentation of bleeding

Document appearance, amount, and frequency of rectal bleeding. Save specimens if possible. Accurate description guides diagnosis: bright red vs maroon vs tarry vs occult.

NPO status and bowel prep preparation

NPO for colonoscopy. Colonoscopy bowel prep may be ordered urgently — administer as directed. Coordinate timing with GI procedure team.

Monitor for colon ischemia signs

Sudden severe crampy abdominal pain followed by hematochezia in elderly patients = ischemic colitis. Notify provider immediately — requires urgent imaging.

Patient education on colon cancer screening

If bleeding is from polyps or cancer, educate on screening recommendations. First-degree relative with colon cancer = screening starts at 40 or 10 years before their diagnosis age.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Lower GI bleeding = source distal to ligament of Treitz. Most common causes: diverticulosis (#1 in adults >50), colorectal cancer, angiodysplasia.
  • Hematochezia (bright red blood per rectum) = typical lower GI bleed. But massive UGIB can also present as hematochezia (rapid transit).
  • Key differentiator: BUN — elevated BUN:Cr ratio suggests upper GI bleed (blood digested as protein). Normal BUN = lower GI source more likely.
  • Diverticular bleed is usually painless — if pain is present, consider diverticulitis, ischemic colitis, or IBD instead.
  • Painless rectal bleeding on toilet paper in young adults = most likely hemorrhoids — but colon cancer must be ruled out in older adults.
  • Ischemic colitis: sudden crampy pain then bright red blood in elderly or post-vascular surgery patients — urgent CT scan.
  • First assessment priority: hemodynamic stability — not identifying the exact source. Stabilize first, then diagnose.
  • Colonoscopy is the gold standard for LGIB diagnosis AND treatment — can identify and treat bleeding lesion in one procedure.
  • Colorectal cancer screening: standard colonoscopy at age 45 (USPSTF). Positive FIT/FOBT = diagnostic colonoscopy within 6 months.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) / AGA · ASPEN (nutrition support). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →