CARDIAC-TAMPONADE AS A RESULT OF ENDOSCOPIC SCLEROTHERAPY - REPORT OF A CASE
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 102 (3) , 546-547
Abstract
Sclerotherapy was used in the treatment of a patient with actively bleeding esophageal varices. Chest pain and a pericardial friction rub became evident on the day after sclerotherapy and resolved without therapy. Six months later the patient manifested cardiac tamponade which required pericardiectomy. The events of this case suggest that chronic pericarditis with cardiac tamponade was a direct complication of sclerotherapy. This report extends the range of reported complications and emphasizes the importance of follow-up of patients in whom transient pericardial friction rub develops after sclerotherapy.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Acute respiratory failure after sodium morrhuate esophageal sclerotherapyGastroenterology, 1983
- Endoscopic Sclerotherapy for Bleeding Esophageal Varices: Effects and ComplicationsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1983