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. 1992 May;183(2):505-8.
doi: 10.1148/radiology.183.2.1561358.

Gastrointestinal bleeding: treatment with gastrointestinal arterial embolization

Affiliations

Gastrointestinal bleeding: treatment with gastrointestinal arterial embolization

C E Encarnacion et al. Radiology. 1992 May.

Abstract

Retrospective analysis of 36 embolization procedures in 29 patients with gastrointestinal bleeding was undertaken, and the presence or absence of coagulopathy was identified as a major factor affecting embolization outcome. Embolization was successful in 18 of 29 (62%) patients and unsuccessful in 11 (38%). Eight of 11 failures (73%) occurred in patients with a coagulopathy, whereas three patients (27%) in whom embolization was successful also had a coagulopathy. Embolization was 2.9 times more likely to be unsuccessful (P = .0463) and death from bleeding after embolization was 9.6 times more likely to occur (P = .0065) in patients with a coagulopathy than in those without. Because embolization was successful in six of 14 (43%) coagulopathy patients, the authors advocate embolization in patients with gastrointestinal bleeding and coagulopathy, while all efforts to correct the coagulopathy would be made as early as possible.

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