Portal hypertension and variceal hemorrhage.
Med Clin North Am. 2009 Jul; 93(4):837-53, vii-viii.MC

Abstract

Portal hypertension is a progressively debilitating complication of cirrhosis and a principal cause of mortality in patients who have hepatic decompensation. This article describes the classification system and pathophysiology of portal hypertension. It also discusses a practical approach to prevention of first variceal hemorrhage, general management of the acute bleeding episode, and secondary prophylaxis to prevent rebleeding. Pharmacologic, endoscopic, radiologic, and surgical modalities are all described in detail.

Links

Publisher Full Text
linkinghub.elsevier.com
journals.elsevierhealth.com
Aggregator Full Text

Authors+Show Affiliations

Sass DA
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Drexel University College of Medicine, 216 N. Broad Street, Feinstein Building, Suite 504, MS 1001, Philadelphia, PA 19102, USA. dsass@drexelmed.edu
Chopra KB
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AlgorithmsEndoscopy, GastrointestinalEsophageal and Gastric VaricesGastrointestinal AgentsGastrointestinal HemorrhageHemodynamicsHumansHypertension, PortalLiver CirrhosisOctreotidePortal SystemPrimary PreventionSecondary PreventionVasoconstrictor AgentsVasopressins

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19577117