0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:57
Portal Hypertensive Bleeding 1197
■endotracheal intubation performed in patients with a major bleed
or significant hepatic encephalopathy to protect the airway
■antibiotics such as norfloxacin administered to prevent spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
specific therapy
Treatment Options: Routine
■vasoactive drugs: octreotide, or vasopressin and nitroglycerin, initi-
ated to decrease portal flow
■endoscopic therapy: either variceal band ligation or sclerotherapy
effective in control of acute hemorrhage
■band ligation is preferable to sclerotherapy because of less com-
plications, lower rate of rebleeding, and decrease in the number of
sessions required to obliterate varices
■gastric varices are more difficult to control, and typically require TIPS
■in rare circumstances, balloon tamponade, emergency portosys-
temic shunt or transection of the esophagus required for exsan-
guinating hemorrhage
Side Effects and Contraindications
■Vasopressin
➣side effects: bradycardia, angina, myocardial infarction, hyper-
tension, abdominal pain
➣contraindications: caution in patients with coronary artery dis-
ease, congestive heart failure or elderly patients
■Octreotide (or somatostatin)
➣side effects: nausea, abdominal pain, flushing
➣contraindications: use with caution in diabetics or patients with
renal dysfunction
Treatment Options: Alternative
■TIPS for patients with continued bleeding in spite of endoscopic
variceal banding or sclerotherapy, or recurrent bleeding in spite of
banding therapy
■technical success of TIPS in control of bleeding: 90–95% of cases
■side effects: early morbidity occurs in 20% of patients, includ-
ing arrhythmias or intraperitoneal bleeding, early precipitation
of liver failure, and exacerbation or precipitation of hepatic
encephalopathy; early mortality is 5%; other problems include TIPS
stenosis or occlusion that may require TIPS revision; late chronic
encephalopathy uncommon, but may be severe in 5% of patients.