Percutaneous drainage, combined with albendazole therapy, is an effective and safe alternative to surgery for the treatment of uncomplicated hydatid cysts of the liver and requires a shorter hospital stay.
Frequent transmission of HEV by blood transfusion places recipients at risk and warrants redefining of the donor screening policy by blood banks, especially in endemic areas.
We prospectively studied 21 consecutive patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction for evidence of biliary tract disease. Two patients were first seen with extrahepatic cholestasis; another had recurrent cholangitis. All three patients with clinically manifest biliary disease were adults. Another five patients had icterus on clinical examination. Liver function tests revealed elevated bilirubin levels in 14 patients (66.6%), elevated alkaline phosphatase levels in 17 (80.9%) and elevated serum ALT levels in 8 (38.0%). Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography revealed abnormal findings in 17 patients (80.9%). The changes involved the common bile duct (66.6%) more often than they did the hepatic bile ducts (38.1%). Cholangiographic abnormalities included strictures (52.4%), caliber irregularity (23.8%), segmental upstream dilatation (42.8%), ectasia (9.5%), collateral veins causing extraluminal bile duct impressions (14.3%), displacement of ducts (9.5%), angulation of ducts (4.7%) and pruning of intrahepatic ducts (9.5%). The pathogenesis of such cholangiographic abnormalities is unknown. However, possible factors in such changes include collateral veins bridging the blocked portal vein, causing bile duct impressions; fibrous scarring of porta hepatis, causing angulation of bile duct; and ischemic injury to bile duct, leading to stricture formation and caliber irregularity. Biliary disease is important in the clinical outcome of patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction because variceal sclerotherapy has prolonged the life expectancies of such patients.
Endoscopic sclerotherapy is an effective treatment for bleeding esophageal varices, but it is associated with significant complications. Endoscopic ligation, a new form of endoscopic treatment for bleeding varices, has been shown to be superior to sclerotherapy in adult patients with cirrhosis. To determine the efficacy and safety of endoscopic sclerotherapy and ligation, the 2 methods were compared in a randomized control trial in 49 children with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction who had proven bleeding from esophageal varices. Twenty-four patients were treated with sclerotherapy and 25 with band ligation. No significant differences were found between the sclerotherapy and ligation groups in arresting active index bleeding (100% each) and achieving variceal eradication (91.7% vs. 96%, P ؍ .61). Band ligation eradicated varices in fewer endoscopic sessions than did sclerotherapy (3.9 ؎ 1.1 vs. 6.1 ؎ 1.7, respectively, P < .0001). The rebleeding rate was significantly higher in the sclerotherapy group (25% vs. 4%, P ؍ .049), as was the rate of major complications (25% vs. 4%, P ؍ .049). After eradication, esophageal variceal recurrence was not significantly different in patients treated by ligation than by sclerotherapy (17.4% vs. 10%, P ؍ .67). In conclusion, variceal band ligation in children is a safe and effective technique that achieves variceal eradication more quickly, with a lower rebleeding rate and fewer complications compared with sclerotherapy. (HEPATOLOGY 2002;36:666-672.)
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