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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this retrospective study was to determine the diagnostic and therapeutic usefulness of gut angiography in patients with massive upper gastrointestinal bleeding from a nonvariceal source. All patients (n = 64) in this category who underwent a gut angiogram between 1980 and 1986 were studied. Pre-angiogram endoscopy was attempted in all patients and was nondiagnostic in 14 (22%). Contrast extravasation at angiography was seen in 25 of 64 patients (39%), and in over half of these patients endoscopy was nondiagnostic (n = 11) or wrong (n = 3). Attempts to control bleeding in this group by selective
arterial embolization
(n = 14) or intra-arterial
vasopressin
(n = 11) successfully averted operation in 13 of 25 patients (52%) and was associated with a 50% reduction in mortality (83% versus 38%). Selective embolization of vessels thought to be bleeding on clinical grounds without evidence of contrast extravasation (i.e., "blind" embolization) was not helpful in controlling hemorrhage. Urgent gut angiography in patients with massive upper gastrointestinal bleeding of arteriocapillary source is a useful diagnostic and therapeutic maneuver and warrants continued application in this group of poor-risk patients.
...
PMID:Angiography in poor-risk patients with massive nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding. 230 34
Most patients with upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage from Mallory-Weiss tear cease bleeding spontaneously and do not require specific therapy. Patients who either continue to bleed and those who rebleed represent specific therapeutic problems. Angiotherapy, either intraarterial
vasopressin
infusion (13 cases) or
arterial embolization
(two cases), was used to treat 15 patients with persistently bleeding Mallory-Weiss tears. Permanent hemostasis was achieved in the majority of patients treated. Results from the current study are compared with those previously reported in the literature. In addition the complications of each treatment method are discussed with emphasis on the cardiac complications of
vasopressin
.
...
PMID:Angiotherapy with Mallory-Weiss tear. 676 51
The use of
vasopressin
infusion or
arterial embolization
in the treatment of 87 patients with gastrointestinal hemorrhage is reviewed. A bleeding point was identified angiographically in 46 patients (53%), with a higher success rate in those with upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (63%) than in those with lower (39%) gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Vasopressin infusion in 33 patients completely stopped hemorrhage in 14 and slowed hemorrhage pending surgery in another 5. Gelfoam embolization was successful as definitive therapy in 12 of 15 patients. Mortality as a result of hemorrhage or its sequelae was 40% in patients with upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage and 21% in those with lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Diagnostic and interventional angiography in acute gastrointestinal hemorrhage. 697
The operative management of stress ulcer in children is controversial. Between the years 1969 and 1981, ten children were operated on at the Babies Hospital for stress ulcer. Their illnesses included connective tissue disorders (3), sepsis (2), Reye's syndrome (1), hemolytic uremic syndrome (1), leukemia (1), closed head injury (1), and renal failure (1). In those with bleeding (8), aggressive conventional medical management was attempted prior to operation. Four children also received intravenous cimetidine. Four patients underwent embolization of a feeding artery and/or selective
vasopressin
infusion. In those patients who perforated (2), operation was performed after a brief period of resuscitation. Ten patients underwent 11 operations. In those who bled, multiple ulcerations were the most common finding. Operative procedures consisted of partial gastrectomy and vagotomy (4), partial gastrectomy alone (2), and vagotomy and pyloroplasty (2). One child who underwent vagotomy and pyloroplasty required partial gastrectomy for recurrent bleeding. Of the two children who perforated, one was managed by plication and the other by partial gastrectomy. There were two deaths (20%), both occurring in patients who had undergone gastrectomy. One survivor has mild dumping. This experience suggests that in children (1) stress ulcers are commonly multiple when associated with major medical illnesses; (2) partial gastrectomy with or without vagotomy affords maximum protection against recurrent bleeding; (3) lesser procedures are effective for solitary bleeding duodenal ulcers or perforation; and (4) selective
arterial embolization
or
vasopressin
infusion are unreliable methods for controlling bleeding.
...
PMID:Operative management of stress ulcers in children. 709 47
Diagnostic and therapeutic angiography has demonstrated an important role in gastrointestinal hemorrhage. During the past 2 years, we performed angiography in the management of 20 patients with uncontrolled gastrointestinal bleeding. Conservative management including medication and transfusion would not appear to suffice in these patients and most patients had been evaluated to have a high operative risk in our series. Ten of the 20 patients had renal dysfunction (creatinine > 1.7 mg/dl) before angiography. The role of angiography in the management of patients with renal dysfunction remains controversial because angiography is likely to produce acute renal failure. We performed angiography to stop bleeding in these patients with renal dysfunction because they could die of blood loss. In our 20 cases, bleeding sites were identified in 14 patients. The detection rate was 70%. Thirteen of the 14 with the use of either
vasopressin
infusion or
arterial embolization
showed complete cessation of bleeding in 10 patients. Three cases failed to be controlled. One received an operation after a bleeding site was located by angiography. In our study, sepsis with renal failure was the leading cause of mortality (6 cases). Ten patients with pre-existing renal dysfunction had angiography performed and only one showed abrupt elevation of creatinine levels after angiography. He also developed sepsis. Deterioration of renal function was possibly due to angiography or more likely due to sepsis and hypovolemia. Six patients died of sepsis after angiography although 4 of these patients showed cessation of bleeding. Four cases with pre-existing renal dysfunction and without evidence of infection survived after angiographic management.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Angiography for the management of poorly controlled gastrointestinal hemorrhage--20 cases clinical observation]. 770 50
Bleeding occurs in up to 10% of patients with advanced cancer. It can present in many different ways. This article provides a qualitative review of treatment options available to manage visible bleeding. Local modalities, such as hemostatic agents and dressings, radiotherapy, endoscopic ligation and coagulation, and transcutaneous
arterial embolization
, are reviewed in the context of advanced cancer, as are systemic treatments such as vitamin K,
vasopressin
/desmopressin, octreotide/somatostatin, antifibrinolytic agents (tranexamic acid and aminocaproic acid), and blood products. Considerations at the end of life are described.
...
PMID:Management of bleeding in patients with advanced cancer. 1547 42
Although most cases of acute gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage either spontaneously resolve or respond to medical management and/or endoscopic treatment, there remain a significant number of patients who require emergency evaluation and treatment by the interventional radiologist. Any angiographic evaluation should begin with selective catheterization of the artery supplying the most likely site of bleeding, as determined by the available clinical, endoscopic, and imaging data. If a source of hemorrhage is identified, superselective catheterization followed by transcatheter embolization with microcoils is the most effective means of successfully controlling hemorrhage while minimizing potential complications. This is now well-recognized as a viable and safe alternative to emergency surgery. In selected situations transcatheter intra-arterial infusion of
vasopressin
may also be useful in controlling acute GI bleeding. One must be aware of the various side effects and potential complications associated with this treatment, however, and recognize the high rebleeding rate. In this article, we review the current role of angiography, transcatheter
arterial embolization
, and infusion therapy in the evaluation and management of GI hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Acute gastrointestinal hemorrhage. 1985 26
We report a case of timely diagnosis of placenta increta by sonography during the third stage of labor, which avoided any attempt at manual removal of a retained placenta and thus prevented additional postpartum bleeding. The use of intra-cervical injection of
vasopressin
and methotrexate and application of transcatheter
arterial embolization
of bilateral uterine arteries and right internal iliac arteries resulted in a good outcome.
...
PMID:Complete resolution of diffuse placenta increta in a primigravida with twin pregnancy: sonographic monitoring. 2155 50
Although most cases of acute nonvariceal gastrointestinal hemorrhage either spontaneously resolve or respond to medical management or endoscopic treatment, there are still a significant number of patients who require emergency angiography and transcatheter treatment. Evaluation with noninvasive imaging such as nuclear scintigraphy or computed tomography may localize the bleeding source and/or confirm active hemorrhage prior to angiography. Any angiographic evaluation should begin with selective catheterization of the artery supplying the most likely site of bleeding, as determined by the available clinical, endoscopic and imaging data. If a hemorrhage source is identified, superselective catheterization followed by transcatheter microcoil embolization is usually the most effective means of successfully controlling hemorrhage while minimizing potential complications. This is now well-recognized as a viable and safe alternative to emergency surgery. In selected situations transcatheter intra-arterial infusion of
vasopressin
may also be useful in controlling acute gastrointestinal bleeding. One must be aware of the various side effects and potential complications associated with this treatment, however, and recognize the high re-bleeding rate. In this article we review the current role of angiography, transcatheter
arterial embolization
and infusion therapy in the evaluation and management of nonvariceal gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Angiographic evaluation and management of acute gastrointestinal hemorrhage. 2246 82
Polycystic liver disease (PLD) is a rare hereditary disease that independently exists in isolated PLD, or as an accompanying symptom of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease and autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease with complicated mechanisms. PLD currently lacks a unified diagnostic standard. The diagnosis of PLD is usually made when the number of hepatic cysts is more than 20. Gigot classification and Schnelldorfer classification are now commonly used to define severity in PLD. Most PLD patients have no clinical symptoms, and minority with severe complications need treatments. Somatostatin analogues, mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor, ursodeoxycholic acid and
vasopressin
-2 receptor antagonist are the potentially effective medical therapies, while cyst aspiration and sclerosis, transcatheter
arterial embolization
, fenestration, hepatic resection and liver transplantation are the options of invasion therapies. However, the effectiveness of these therapies except liver transplantation are still uncertain. Furthermore, there is no unified strategy to treat PLD between medical centers at present. In order to better understand recent study progresses on PLD for clinical practice and obtain potential directions for future researches, this review mainly focuses on the recent progress in PLD classification, clinical manifestation, diagnosis and treatment. For information, we also provided medical treatment processes of PLD in our medical center.
...
PMID:Polycystic liver disease: Classification, diagnosis, treatment process, and clinical management. 3223 61
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