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Comparative Study
. 1991;80(1):26-9.

Surgery of acute peptic ulcer haemorrhage

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1888109
Comparative Study

Surgery of acute peptic ulcer haemorrhage

K Kuttila et al. Ann Chir Gynaecol. 1991.

Abstract

During the years 1973-1985, 145 patients with acute peptic ulcer haemorrhage were treated surgically at the Department of Surgery, Turku University Central Hospital. The bleeding site was gastric ulcer in 76 patients; 58 of these were treated by gastric resection and 17 by ulcer excision combined with vagotomy and pyloroplasty. Forty-two out of 69 patients with bleeding duodenal ulcer were treated with partial gastrectomy, the remaining with transfixion and vagotomy and pyloroplasty. The rebleeding rate was 2% and reoperation rate 9% among the patients who had a resection. In contrast 19% of the transfixed and 12% of ulcer excision cases rebled. The primary overall mortality was 12%; 44% of the patients with recurrent bleeding died. Because rebleeding was the most important cause of mortality, partial gastrectomy in bleeding gastric as well as duodenal ulcer may be preferable.

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