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Query: UMLS:C1510475 (diverticular disease)
2,138 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiography is useful in the diagnosis of active gastrointestinal bleeding if the rate is greater than 0.5 mL/min. For upper gastrointestinal bleeding, endoscopy is the preferred initial investigation and angiography is used for diagnosis only if the site of bleeding is still obscure. Angiography is the preferred method for investigation of massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding if results of sigmoidoscopy are negative. Vasopressin infusion is most useful for control of bleeding from esophageal varices, erosive gastritis and diverticular disease of the colon. Embolization with Gelfoam or clot is possible for massive hemorrhage from a single source in poor-risk patients. This is most successful for gastric or duodenal bleeding since the collateral blood supply prevents infarction. Some of the methods and complications of embolization are discussed and examples are given. Standard surgical principles should still apply in most cases.
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PMID:Angiography in determining the cause and treatment of gastrointestinal bleeding. 30 77

Transcatheter therapy for arteriocapillary gastrointestinal bleeding is often an effective form of treatment. The choice of transcatheter therapy (ie, vasoconstrictor or occlusive) often is dependent on the etiology and location of bleeding. Vasopressin is a generally safe form of treatment which is often successful in treating bleeding secondary to gastritis, Mallory-Weiss mucosal tears, and diverticular disease. It is less effective in treating bleeding peptic ulcers, neoplastic bleeding, or bleeding when clotting abnormalities exist. Occlusive therapy is an effective alternate form of therapy in selected circumstances. Ischemic complications from vasoconstrictor and embolic therapy may occur and require appropriate caution and discretion with their use.
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PMID:Transcatheter therapy of gastrointestinal arterial bleeding. 30 20

Fifty patients with massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding were initially managed with emergency angiography. The average age was 67.2; mean hematocrit, 23.7; and average transfusion, 7.6 units. Thirty-six patients (72%) had bleeding site located; bleeding sites were distributed throughout the colon. Etiologies of bleeding included diverticular disease (19 patients) and arteriovenous malformations (15 patients). Twenty of 22 (91%) patients receiving selective intra-arterial vasopressin stopped bleeding; however, 50% rebled on cessation of vasopressin. Thirty-five of 50 (70%) patients underwent surgery, with 57% operated on electively after vasopressin therapy. Seventeen patients had segmental colectomy, with no rebleeding. Nine of the 17 patients had diverticular disease in the remaining colon. Operative morbidity in these 35 patients was significantly improved when compared to previously reported patients undergoing emergency subtotal colectomy without angiography (8.6% vs. 37%) (p less than 0.02). Emergency angiography successfully locates the bleeding site, allowing for segmental colectomy. Vasopressin infusion transiently halts bleeding, permitting elective surgery in many instances.
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PMID:Impact of emergency angiography in massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding. 309 66

The incidence of bleeding from diverticular disease ranges from 3 to 30%. Haemorrhage is more common when the whole colon is affected; the source is more frequently in the right colon. Typically, the bleeding is massive, with 15% of the patients admitted in shock. It nearly always stops spontaneously, but recurrence rate is high. Chronic blood loss suggests alternative sources. Emergency angiography detects aetiology and site of the haemorrhage in most of the patients. Vasopressin infusion can frequently stop the bleeding. Colonoscopy is profitable only when bleeding stops, after a rapid clearing of the colon. On the other hand, intraoperative colonoscopy could be useful in emergency cases when urgent surgery is clearly indicated. Surgical treatment is requested only in few patients: segmental resections (generally right hemicolectomy) are indicated when there is evidence of the source of the blood loss. In the other cases sub-total or total colectomy are justified and provide better and safer results.
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PMID:[Bleeding in diverticular disease of the colon]. 983 19