Literature DB >> 22668962

Outcome in decompensated alcoholic cirrhotic patients with acute variceal bleeding.

Jake E J Krige1, Urda K Kotze, Rauf Sayed, Sean Burmeister, Marc Bernon, Galya Chinnery.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Variceal bleeding (VB) is the leading cause of death in cirrhotic patients with oesophageal varices. We evaluated the efficacy of emergency endoscopic intervention in controlling acute variceal bleeding and preventing rebleeding and death during the index hospital admission in a large cohort of consecutively treated alcoholic cirrhotic patients after a first variceal bleed.
METHODS: From January 1984 to August 2011, 448 alcoholic cirrhotic patients (349 men, 99 women; median age 50 years) with VB underwent endoscopic treatments (556 emergency, 249 elective) during the index hospital admission. Endoscopic control of initial bleeding, variceal rebleeding and survival after the first hospital admission were recorded.
RESULTS: Endoscopic intervention alone controlled VB in 394 patients (87.9%); 54 also required balloon tamponade. Within 24 hours 15 patients rebled; after 24 hours 61 (17%, n=76) rebled; and 93 (20.8%) died in hospital. No Child-Pugh (C-P) grade A patients died, while 16 grade B and 77 grade C patients died. Mortality increased exponentially as the C-P score increased, reaching 80% when the C-P score exceeded 13.
CONCLUSION: Despite initial control of variceal haemorrhage, 1 in 6 patients (17%) rebled during the first hospital admission. Survival (79.2%) was influenced by the severity of liver failure, with most deaths occurring in C-P grade C patients.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22668962     DOI: 10.7196/samj.5493

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  S Afr Med J


  1 in total

1.  Variceal bleeding in cirrhotic patients: risk factors, evolution, treatment.

Authors:  Anca Romcea; Marcel Tanţău; Andrada Seicean; Oliviu Pascu
Journal:  Clujul Med       Date:  2013-05-09
  1 in total

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