Emergency Portacaval Shunt Treatment for Bleeding Esophageal Varices
- 1 March 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 108 (3) , 293-299
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1974.01350270027006
Abstract
A prospective evaluation of emergency portacaval shunt has been conducted during a ten-year period in 115 unselected consecutive patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and bleeding esophageal varices. An extensive diagnostic evaluation was completed within seven hours of hospital admission and the shunt operation was undertaken within a mean 8.1 hours. Follow-up was conducted in a special clinic, and the current status of 98.3% of the patients is known. Eighty-two percent of the patients had jaundice, ascites, or encephalopathy alone or in combination on admission. Contrary to recent proposals, patients with the highest portal perfusion pressure and the largest hepatopetal portal blood flow had the highest survival rate, and those who sustained the smallest portal flow diversion from the shunt had the lowest survival rate. The operative survival rate was 48%, the predicted seven-year survival rate was 30%, and the actual seven-year survival rate of 40 patients who were operated on seven or more years ago was 42.5%. In comparisons with our previous prospective studies, emergency portacaval shunt resulted in a significantly greater long-term survival rate than either emergency medical therapy or emergency varix ligation, followed by elective shunt.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Emergency Treatment of Bleeding Esophageal VaricesDigestion, 1970
- EXPERIENCES WITH EMERGENCY PORTA-CAVAL SHUNTInternal Medicine Journal, 1969
- Selective Trans-Splenic Decompression Of Gastroesophageal Varices By Distal Splenorenal ShuntAnnals of Surgery, 1967
- Emergency Portal-Systemic ShuntsSurgical Clinics of North America, 1967
- Emergency Portacaval Shunt for Esophagogastric HemorrhageArchives of Surgery, 1965
- Shunt Operation in Acute Bleeding from Esophageal VaricesAnnals of Surgery, 1964
- Experience with Portacaval Shunt for Portal HypertensionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1961
- Cirrhosis with HemorrhageArchives of Surgery, 1959
- Maximum utilization of the life table method in analyzing survivalJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1958
- THE LIFE HISTORY OF PATIENTS WITH CIRRHOSIS OF THE LIVER AND BLEEDING ESOPHAGEAL VARICES*Annals of Surgery, 1955