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Review
. 2006 Mar;20(3):165-70.
doi: 10.1155/2006/743783.

Emergency management of bleeding esophageal varices: drugs, bands or sleep?

Affiliations
Review

Emergency management of bleeding esophageal varices: drugs, bands or sleep?

Brian M Yan et al. Can J Gastroenterol. 2006 Mar.

Abstract

Variceal bleeding is a severe complication of cirrhosis leading to significant morbidity and mortality. Treatment of acute variceal bleeding has improved dramatically since the era of the mechanical balloon tamponade. These advances include endoscopic band ligation or sclerotherapy, and vasoactive pharmacological options such as somatostatin, octreotide, vasopressin and terlipressin. Evidence from a multitude of clinical trials and meta-analyses comparing endoscopic and pharmacological treatments suggests near equivalence in efficacy for initial hemostasis, mortality and rate of rebleeding. This raises the question of whether on-call gastroenterologists should be performing emergency endoscopic treatment in the middle of the night or start pharmacological treatment and delay endoscopy until optimal patient and working conditions the next morning. The present review analyzes the available comparative data between endoscopic and pharmacological treatment options. Although the literature cannot yet definitively answer the question posed, the authors suggest that delaying endoscopic treatment until the next morning may be the most reasonable practical approach.

Les hémorragies variqueuses sont une complication grave de la cirrhose, associées à une morbidité et à une mortalité importantes. Le traitement des hémorragies variqueuses aiguës s’est considérablement amélioré depuis l’arrivée de la tamponnade mécanique par ballonnet. Les progrès réalisés dans le domaine comprennent la ligature élastique endoscopique et la sclérothérapie ainsi que les médicaments à action vasomotrice comme la somatostatine, l’octréotide, la vasopressine et la terlipressine. Des données provenant de plusieurs essais cliniques et de méta-analyses et comparant les interventions endoscopiques au traitement médicamenteux semblent indiquer que les deux approches donnent des résultats quasi équivalents en ce qui concerne l’efficacité de l’hémostase initiale, la mortalité et le taux de récidive hémorragique. L’observation soulève toute la question du traitement, notamment de la conduite à tenir par les gastroentérologues de garde : vaut-il mieux pratiquer une intervention endoscopique d’urgence au beau milieu de la nuit ou prescrire un traitement médicamenteux et reporter l’endoscopie au lendemain matin lorsque le patient est en meilleur état et les conditions de travail, plus appropriées ? Le présent article passe en revue les données disponibles comparant les interventions endoscopiques au traitement médicamenteux. Même si la documentation ne fournit pas de réponse définitive à la question, les auteurs croient que le report de l’endoscopie au lendemain matin serait peut-être la meilleure conduite à tenir.

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