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Bleeding oesophageal varices.

M Stephen,J M Little

The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery(1978)

Cited 7|Views6
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Abstract
At the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, most patients with bleeding varices have been poor-risk alcoholics. A high proportion were receiving a State pension. The early mortality due to bleeding varices was 53%. This figure comprised a 60% mortality following conservative management and 40% after urgent shunt. All patients having urgent operations which were not portal decompression died. No patient who had an elective shunt died. In a mean follow-up period of 15.4 months, a further 14% of survivors died. No form of conservative management appeared to have much effect on the natural history of the bleeding. A blood replacement of more than five litres indicated that spontaneous cessation of haemorrhage was unlikely. Shunt operations usually controlled haemorrhage, but hepatorenal failure was common after the urgent shunts. The cost of operation was greater than that of conservative management, but in neither case was it considered excessive.
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