Literature DB >> 20380111

Proton pump inhibitors after endoscopic hemostasis in patients with peptic ulcer bleeding.

Rusmir Mesihovic1, Nenad Vanis, Amila Mehmedovic, Srdjan Gornjakovic, Mehmed Gribajcevic.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Peptic ulcer bleeding is a common and potentially fatal condition. For patients with bleeding peptic ulcers that display major endoscopic stigmata of recent hemorrhage, a combination of endoscopic and pharmacologic therapy is the current standard management.
OBJECTIVE: To show our experience with management of peptic ulcer bleeding. PATIENTS: Patients who presented with gastrointestinal bleeding caused by peptic ulcer or recent history (< 24 h before presentation) of hematemesis and/or melena admitted to our hospital emergency departments, and patients whose ulcer hemorrhage started after hospitalization for an unrelated medical or surgical condition.
METHODS: Patients with actively bleeding ulcers and those with nonbleeding visible vessel or adherent clot were treated with epinephrine injection and/or endoscopic hemoclips, and randomized to receive intravenous pantoprasole according to the continuous regimen (dose of 5 x 40 mg in continuous infusion of 8 mg/h for 72 h) or the standard regimen (40 mg bolus of PPI twice daily for 3 days). After the infusion, all patients were given 40 mg PPI twice daily orally. The primary end point was the in-hospital rebleeding rate, as discovered by the repeated endoscopy.
RESULTS: Bleeding recurred in 5 of 34 patients (14.7%) receiving the intensive regimen, and in 8 of 35 (22.8%) patients receiving the standard regimen. Hemoglobin (g/l) rate in standard regimen group was 93.5 +/- 23.8, and in intensive regimen group 106.6 +/- 22.4 (P = 0.042). Mean units of blood transfused for all patients in group were 71.8 +/- 45.8 in the intensive and 45.3 +/- 50.2 in the standard regimen group (P = 0.0257). The duration of hospital stay was 6.4 +/- 2.8 in standard group and 5.8 +/- 2.8 in the intensive group (P = 0.40).
CONCLUSIONS: In patients with bleeding peptic ulcers with successful endoscopic hemostasis the standard PPI regimen had advantage on transfusion requirements, but no advantage with respect to in-hospital rates of rebleeding rates, need for surgery, length of hospital stay, or death, which corresponds with recent studies.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20380111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Arh        ISSN: 0350-199X


  2 in total

1.  Second-look endoscopy for bleeding peptic ulcer disease: a decision-effectiveness and cost-effectiveness analysis.

Authors:  Thomas F Imperiale; Nan Kong
Journal:  J Clin Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 3.062

Review 2.  Proton pump inhibitor treatment initiated prior to endoscopic diagnosis in upper gastrointestinal bleeding.

Authors:  Takeshi Kanno; Yuhong Yuan; Frances Tse; Colin W Howden; Paul Moayyedi; Grigorios I Leontiadis
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2022-01-07
  2 in total

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