Leukocyte esterase reagent strips may provide a rapid bedside diagnosis of SBP and thereby shorten time to appropriate management. The Nephur-Test appeared to out-perform MultistixSG. These tests might be particularly useful in ambulatory settings or whenever ascites fluid analysis is not rapidly available.
We undertook a multicenter randomized trial to compare the efficacy of terlipressin combined with transdermal nitroglycerin and that of octreotide in the emergency control of acute variceal hemorrhage in cirrhosis. Over 16 mo, 87 patients with endoscopically proved active bleeding from esophageal or cardiac varices were enrolled in five centers in France and randomly assigned to receive intravenous terlipressin (2 mg and then 1 mg/4 hr over 24 hr) and transdermal nitroglycerin (10 mg/12 hr over 24 hr) (group 1) or octreotide (continuous intravenous infusion of 25 micrograms/hr over 12 hr and then 100 micrograms at hr 12 and hr 18 subcutaneously) (group 2). Initial control of bleeding was assessed at the end of 12 hr of treatment on the basis of stability of blood pressure and hematocrit level with no further transfusion requirements. At 12 hr, bleeding was controlled in 59% (24 of 41) in group 1 and 78% (36/46) of group 2 patients (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.064). Mean transfusion requirements over this 12-hr period were significantly greater in group 1 (three blood units; range = 0 to 13) than in group 2 (one blood unit; range = 0 to 5) (p = 0.002). After the first 12 hr, 20% of patients (5 of 24) had repeat bleeding in group 1 compared with 27% (10 of 36) in group 2. During the first 48-hr period, five patients (12%) died in group 1, compared with 3 (6%) in group 2. Few side effects were noted in either group. However, in group 1 two patients experienced severe bradycardia; it resulted in death in one patient.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
A randomized trial was undertaken to determine the efficacy of nitroglycerin in addition to terlipressin infusion to improve the control of acute variceal hemorrhage compared with balloon tamponade. Forty-seven bleeding episodes in 34 cirrhotic patients were included, with terlipressin plus sublingual nitroglycerin in 23 episodes (group I) and balloon tamponade in 24 episodes (group II). At the end of the 12-hr period, hemorrhage had been equally controlled in both groups (18 of 23; 78% in group I and 19 of 24; 79% in group II). When attempted, balloon tamponade appeared more efficient in the failures of group I (4 of 4) than did terlipressin plus nitroglycerin in the failures of group II (0 of 3), although this difference was not significant. Major complications were rare (one in each group) and never required cessation of therapy. Thus terlipressin and nitroglycerin were as effective as balloon tamponade in controlling variceal hemorrhage and were associated with few minor complications.
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