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Endoscopic injection sclerotherapy for 1,000 patients with esophageal varices: A nine-year prospective study

โœ Scribed by Makoto Hashizume; Seigo Kitano; Nobuhiro Koyanagi; Kazuo Tanoue; Masayuki Ohta; Hiroya Wada; Hirohiko Yamaga; Hidefumi Higashi; Yasunori Iso; Tetsuya Iwanaga; Keizo Sugimachi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
691 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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โœฆ Synopsis


We report here the results of endoscopic injection sclerotherapy performed in 1,000 consecutively treated Japanese patients with esophageal varices. This prospective study covered the period from 1982 to 1990. Variceal bleeding was controlled in 215 (97.7%) of 220 patients. Esophageal varices were completely eradicated in 778 patients (77.8%); the mean number of sessions was 4.2. In only 3 of the 778 patients did esophageal varices of the same size recur. Small, dilated, venous vessels that required additional sclerotherapy in follow-up endoscopy at 3-mo intervals appeared in 171 (22.2%) of 778 patients. The cumulative nonbleeding rate at 5 yr was 94.5% in patients in whom the varices had been eradicated. Deaths caused by upper gastrointestinal bleeding accounted for 2.6% of cases, whereas the rates of liver failure and hepatoma were 4.6% and 47.3%, respectively. The 5-yr cumulative survival rate was 54.1% in patients without concomitant hepatoma; it was 12.0% in patients with hepatomas. Multivariate analysis showed that hepatoma, Child classification, indication (acute, elective or prophylactic) and eradication were independent factors that significantly influenced survival time. This study clearly shows that close follow-up with endoscopy and complete eradication lead to significant reduction in bleeding from esophageal varices and reduction of mortality related to this bleeding.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Sclerotherapy vs. esophageal transection
โœ Seigo Kitano; Yasunori Iso; Makoto Hashizume; Hirohiko Yamaga; Nobuhiro Koyanagi ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1992 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 691 KB

Ninety-six patients with good liver function (Child class A or B) and esophageal varices were randomly assigned to one of three groups given different treatments: endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (n = 32), esophageal transection (n = 32) or distal splenorenal shunt (n = 32). Five patients (5.2%) h