| Literature DB >> 3777335 |
H Orozco, F Juarez, M Uribe, J Hernandez, J Ordorica, R Armenta, M Aranceta, M A Mercado, P Santillan, A Mendoza.
Abstract
In the last 10 years, we operated on 231 patients with hemorrhagic portal hypertension. Most of these patients had some form of liver disease. We performed various surgical procedures: 47 conventional shunts with H grafts and terminolateral portacaval shunts with arterialization of the portal stump, 139 selective Warren shunts, and in those patients in whom a selective portasystemic shunt could not be performed for technical reasons, esophagogastric devascularization in the form of the Sugiura procedure. Forty-five patients were treated with the Sugiura procedure as a one stage or two stage procedure. A total of 68 emergency and elective operations were performed. The operative mortality rate for the emergency thoracic operation was 41 percent and for the abdominal operation, 42 percent. The overall operative mortality rate in the emergency group was 41 percent. The incidence of recurrent variceal bleeding and encephalopathy was 0 in the surviving patients. The survival rate at 3 year follow-up was 40 percent. The elective group was made up of 24 patients. Eighteen patients had a two stage procedure and 6 patients had a one stage procedure. The operative mortality rate for the abdominal operation was 11 percent, whereas that for the thoracic operation was 7 percent. The operative mortality rate for the one stage procedure was 16 percent. The overall operative mortality rate in the elective group was 10.8 percent. None of these patients had recurrent variceal bleeding and encephalopathy developed in only one (5 percent). The encephalopathy was easily controlled with medical treatment. The 3 year survival rate was 83 percent. We conclude that the Sugiura procedure is an effective procedure to treat hemorrhagic portal hypertension when a selective shunt cannot be performed.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3777335 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9610(86)90224-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Surg ISSN: 0002-9610 Impact factor: 2.565