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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiodysplasic lesions can be located anywhere in the gastrointestinal tract, but most of them are found in the cecum and right colon. Angiodysplasias are very infrequent in the stomach and small bowel. These lesions can be associated with several clinical conditions, such as certain coagulation disorders and liver diseases. We report the case of a diffuse gastrointestinal angiodysplasia in a female patient with idiopathic cirrhosis of the liver who developed a coagulopathy which mimicked von Willebrand disease. After repeated blood transfusions, which were not able to control the anemia of the patient, an antrectomy was performed because most lesions were located in the antrum. The procedure did not achieve a suitable control of the bleeding. Finally, a hormonal therapy combining estrogens and progestagens, was able to control, at least partially, the patient's chronic gastrointestinal bleeding.
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PMID:[Diffuse gastrointestinal angiodysplasia associated with cryptogenic hepatic cirrhosis and coagulopathy simulating von Willebrand disease]. 896 79

Gastric mucosal abnormalities resulting from portal hypertension are defined as "congestive gastropathy". A case of congestive gastropathy with unusual features, in a 63 year old man with a history of excessive alcohol intake and cirrhosis, is described. The patient underwent a subtotal gastrectomy because of profuse bleeding from a gastric ulcer, providing a large surgical specimen for examination. Unusual gross and histological findings included prominent arterial intimal hyperplasia, and diffuse duplication and focal fragmentation of the internal lamina elastica. The differential diagnosis of this condition includes primary angiodysplastic gastropathy such as Dieulafoy's disease. The similarity with Dieulafoy-like angiodysplasia emphasises that clear cut criteria to define gastric vascular lesions do not yet exist.
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PMID:Late stage congestive gastropathy. 921 56

Portal-hypertensive colopathy has attracted interest in recent years because such lesions can cause life-threatening hemorrhage. In contrast to upper gastrointestinal bleeding from varices, there is no established therapy for bleeding from angiodysplasia-like lesions. This case report describes the first successful use of transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) for long-term control of bleeding from angiodysplasia-like colonic lesions in a patient with cirrhosis caused by chronic hepatitis B infection. During an 18-month course after TIPS, angiodysplasia-like lesions disappeared without any further evidence of recurrent hematochezia. TIPS may be helpful as second-line treatment in patients with recurrent portal-hypertensive bleeding from colonic angiodysplasia-like lesions who do not tolerate or are unresponsive to treatment with beta-adrenergic blockers.
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PMID:Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt for bleeding angiodysplasia-like lesions in portal-hypertensive colopathy. 964 72

Aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of esophageal bleeding in a group of 3741 consecutive patients with acute non variceal upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage observed between January 1990 and January 1999 in the First Division of General Surgery--University of Verona. In 627 patients (16.8%) the source of bleeding was exclusively esophageal; and the most frequent causes of esophageal bleeding were reflux esopagitis (408 cases) and Mallory Weiss syndrome (185 cases). At emergency endoscopy, reflux esophagitis was actively bleeding in 83 cases (20.3%) and these patients presented a significantly higher frequency of cirrhosis and severe esophagitis; moreover a higher percentage of patients with bleeding esophagitis have had recent surgery and/or were hospitalized in an intensive care unit. No death directly related to the bleeding were observed, while ten patients deceased from other causes during the hospitalization. In more than half of the 185 patients affected by Mallory-Weiss syndrome a hiatal hernia was described and 69 (37.3%) were alcoholics with associated cirrhosis in 25 cases. In more than 70% of the cases the bleeding from a mucosal tear followed a vomit episode and the lesions were localized at the gastroesophageal junction. Endoscopic sclerotherapy was performed in 89 patients with active bleeding and hemostasis was initially obtained in all patients; rebleeding occurred in 6 patients (6.7%) who needed a further endoscopic treatment. No patients died during hospitalization. Other causes of esophageal bleeding observed were: Candida esophagitis (19 cases), esophageal malignancy (11 cases), benign polyps (2 cases), angiodysplasia (one case) and one case of aorto-esophageal fistula.
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PMID:[Esophageal non-variceal hemorrhage: a clinical and epidemiological study]. 1222 72

We present the case of a 74 year old female patient, with clinical criteria of liver cirrhosis caused by hepatic C virus who required several admissions in our hospital over a five month period. She was given several blood transfusions because of repeated clinical manifestation of gastrointestinal bleeding without a clear origin. Her last admission was due to intermittent melenas, secondary anemia and hemodynamic angina. The patient's study included clinical analysis, fibrogastroscopy, colonoscopy, opaque enema, spiral CT and supraortic vessels arteriography. Because all the results to diagnose and locate the patient's disease were negative, she was referred to our service for a scintigraphy study. As it was an emergency case because of the patient's serious hemodynamic condition, a 99mTc-sulphur colloid scintigraphy was chosen, the results of which showed and located active gastrointestinal bleeding requiring urgent surgical intervention. The laparotomy with intrasurgical enterotomy and fibrogastroscopy undertaken ratified gastrointestinal bleeding, and the result of the biopsy of the jejunum removed in the intervention confirmed bowel angiodysplasia. Given the low incidence of gastrointestinal bleeding secondary to bowel angiodysplasia and absence of bibliographic references regarding the diagnosis of this disease in the above mentioned site by means of 99mTc-sulphur colloid scintigraphy in particular, we consider it interesting to highlight this case, in which the capability of this nuclear medicine technique for quick and non-invasive detection and location of gastrointestinal bleeding has been highly proven.
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PMID:[Value of 99mTc-Sulphur colloid scintigraphy in the diagnosis of intermittent digestive bleeding secondary to a case of jejunal angiodysplasia]. 1255 31

The aim of the present study was to draw an outline of the clinical epidemiology of bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias. The study includes a report of a case and of our series of patients with bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias admitted, between 1993 and 2003, to a ward of Internal Medicine where digestive endoscopy is also performed. A review of the literature is also provided. An 80-year-old cirrhotic woman with aortic stenosis, was referred to our Department because of anemia due to melena. In spite of 13 hospitalizations during which numerous diagnostic procedures including endoscopy, X-ray studies, arteriography, labeled red blood cells scanning and laparotomy with intraoperative ileoscopy, the site and nature of the bleeding lesion remained unidentified. Her red blood cell requirement progressively increased from 6 U in 1993 to 24 U in 1994 to 40 U as of September 1995. Enteroscopy disclosed duodeno-jejunal angiodysplasia. The patient subsequently received 35 additional red blood cell units during 7 new admissions. Between 1993 and 2003, 24 patients were identified. They were mainly women and their average age was 77 years. Angiodysplasias were localized in the large bowel in 92% of cases. Comorbidities included: heart disease (79%), chronic liver disease (29%) and chronic renal failure (21%). One fourth of patients were under anticoagulant drugs or had a hemostatic blood disorder. All patients received blood transfusions and endoscopic treatment was performed in approximately half of the cases. The most relevant updates are related to the pathogenic relationship between aortic stenosis, von Willebrand's disease and bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias, the hemostatic alterations associated with liver cirrhosis or with chronic renal failure and the diagnosis and treatment of bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias. A better understanding of the clinical epidemiology of bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias may facilitate their diagnosis and contribute to an effective clinical management.
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PMID:[Bleeding gastrointestinal angiodysplasias: our experience and a review of the literature]. 1531 67

Western patients with obscure lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage (OLGIH) are usually 60 years or older, bleed from colonic diverticulosis or angiodysplasia, and need localizing investigations. In India, patients are younger, the causes of bleeding different, and health resources scarce. We followed a policy of early surgical exploration operation and excision of the bleeding source or, if this was not identified, did a right hemicolectomy. The outcome of this strategy was evaluated. Between 1996 and 2003, we managed 62 patients with OLGIH. Localizing investigations such as enteroclysis, radioisotope scanning, angiography, and peroperative enteroscopy were infrequently performed. Fifty patients underwent surgery, emergency (35 pts) or elective (15 pts), and comprised the study group. At operation the lesion was localized in 33 (66%) patients (jejunum in 9 and terminal ileum or cecum in 24) and was resected. In 17 patients no lesion was found and they had a right hemicolectomy. The 30-day mortality was six patients (12%) and included persistent bleeding (three), liver failure (one), and chest infection (one). Five (10%) patients rebled after operation at a mean follow-up of 31 months. Cirrhosis (P=0.003) as a comorbid illness was the only significant factor for rebleed in the right hemicolectomy group. Advanced age (>60 years; P=0.08) might be another risk factor in a larger study. In conclusion, patients with obscure OLGIH in India should have an early operation. If a lesion is not detected, a right hemicolectomy may be done. In this group those with cirrhosis have a higher chance of rebleed, as well as, perhaps, elderly patients.
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PMID:Surgery for obscure lower gastrointestinal bleeding in India. 1715 9

Classification of vascular abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract on the basis of anatomy and pathophysiology has recently been suggested. Angiodysplasia, an example of an arteriovenous lesion, may cause either acute or chronic bleeding. Diagnosis may be difficult. High-quality standard endoscopy, capsule endoscopy, and double-balloon enteroscopy are most efficacious. Therapy using argon plasma coagulation is currently preferred. Pharmacological therapy has been employed, but a final conclusion about its efficacy cannot yet be drawn. Dieulafoy lesion, an arterial type of vascular abnormality, is rare but serious. It can be responsible for severe haemorrhage. Mechanical endoscopic methods are the most efficacious. Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE), a capillary lesion, can be safely biopsied; it coincides with several diseases (including liver cirrhosis), may cause chronic iron-deficiency anaemia, and is best treated by argon plasma coagulation. Haemangiomas, benign neoplastic lesions, usually occur as part of other specific syndromes; they are difficult to manage due to the multiplicity and size of the lesions.
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PMID:Vascular lesions of the gastrointestinal tract. 1834 86

We describe a case of obscure gastrointestinal bleeding in a male with noncirrhotic portal hypertension who required multiple admissions and repeated blood transfusions over a 5-month period. Upper and lower gastrointestinal endoscopy failed to establish a cause for bleeding which was eventually ascribed to universal portal hypertensive stigmata in stomach, small bowel and colon, which were not amenable to endoscopic therapy. On account of extensive venous thrombosis, neither surgical shunting nor interventional radiology was an option. Initial management with prothrombotic agents failed. Our patient was successfully stabilized on long-acting somatostatin (SMS) analogue therapy using lanreotide, resulting in avoidance of further admissions and blood transfusion and restoration of his independence and quality of life. The use of short-acting SMS analogues is recognised in acute variceal haemorrhage secondary to portal hypertension in cirrhosis, and long-acting SMS analogue therapy has been described in obscure gastrointestinal bleeding though secondary to angiodysplasia. However, the potential role of long-term SMS analogues in noncirrhotic portal hypertensive bleeding of this type has not been reported earlier. This case supports its use in this scenario in the absence of surgical options and when only palliative approaches are available.
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PMID:Long-acting somatostatin analogue therapy in obscure-overt gastrointestinal bleeding in noncirrhotic portal hypertension: a case report and literature review. 1949 95

A major cause of cirrhosis related morbidity and mortality is the development of variceal bleeding, a direct consequence of portal hypertension. Less common causes of gastrointestinal bleeding are peptic ulcers, malignancy, angiodysplasia, etc. Upper gastrointestinal bleeding has been classified according to the presence of a variceal or non-variceal bleeding. Although non-variceal gastrointestinal bleeding is not common in cirrhotic patients, gastroduodenal ulcers may develop as often as non-cirrhotic patients. Ulcers in cirrhotic patients may be more severe and less frequently associated with chronic intake of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and may require more frequently endoscopic treatment. Portal hypertensive gastropathy (PHG) refers to changes in the mucosa of the stomach in patients with portal hypertension. Patients with portal hypertension may experience bleeding from the stomach, and pharmacologic or radiologic interventional procedure may be useful in preventing re-bleeding from PHG. Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) seems to be different disease entity from PHG, and endoscopic ablation can be the first-line treatment.
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PMID:Management of portal hypertensive gastropathy and other bleeding. 2475 52


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