Management of hepatic hydrothorax is difficult and oftenHepatic hydrothorax is a rare complication of portal results in iatrogenic complications. Repeated thoracentesis, hypertension. Conservative therapy may be successful chest tube thoracostomy, pleurodesis, and peritoneovenous but refractory hepatic hydrothorax is not uncommon.shunt have been used with varying degrees of success. HowManagement of refractory hydrothorax is usually inefever, there have been many reports of failure and complicafective and can result in a worsened clinical status.tion with each of these procedures. [7][8][9] The only definitive Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (TIPS) treatment is liver transplantation. lower portal pressure and have been used in the treatTransjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) rement of refractory ascites. The aim of this study was duces portal pressure and has been reported to improve the to determine the efficacy of TIPS in the treatment of control of refractory ascites in cirrhotic patients. [10][11][12] The goal symptomatic refractory hepatic hydrothorax. A TIPS was placed in 24 consecutive cirrhotic patients with of this study was to determine if the reduction in portal pressymptomatic refractory hepatic hydrothorax. Five pa-sure by TIPS improved the control of symptomatic hepatic tients (20.8%) were Child's/Pugh class B and 19 (79.2%) hydrothorax. Additionally, we evaluated the effect of TIPS in were class C. All had undergone multiple thoracenteses these patients on the Child's-Pugh class and the need for and were hypoalbuminemic. Mean follow-up was 7.2 orthotopic liver transplantation. The Child's-Pugh score improved in 7 (58.3%) of these 12candidates. All acceptable alcoholic liver transplantation candidates patients and two patients improved from class C to class were considered to have been abstinent for at least 6 months. A. These two patients no longer require liver transAll patients had clinical, laboratory, and radiologic evidence of plantation. This study shows that TIPS can be effective liver disease and portal hypertension. All patients had persistent in the management of symptomatic, refractory hepatic right-sided hydrothorax despite sodium and fluid restriction and the hydrothorax. Clinical and laboratory improvement may use of the maximum tolerable doses of diuretics. Diuretic use was be seen and liver transplantation may become unneces-limited by progressive azotemia, electrolyte imbalance, and hypotension. Infectious causes of hydrothorax were ruled out by fluid analysary. (HEPATOLOGY 1997;25:1366-1369.) sis and culture. Only patients with pulmonary symptoms, such as dyspnea and orthopnea, were enrolled in the study. All patients had Hepatic hydrothorax is the accumulation of ascitic fluid undergone multiple thoracenteses before transfer to our hospital. in the pleural space. It occurs in 0.4% to 12.2% of cirrhotic Five patients had chest tubes in place draining at least 4 L/d. Atpatients.1-3 The precise pathogenetic mechanisms remain un-tempts to remove or clamp ...
Radiological feeding tube insertion is a safe and effective procedure. Success rates are higher, and complication rates lower than PEG or surgical gastrostomy tube placement and innovative techniques for gastric and jejunal access mean that there are very few cases in which RIG is not possible. The principal weakness of radiologically inserted gastrostomies is the limitiation on tube size which leads to a higher rate of tube blockage. Per-oral image-guided gastrostomies have to an extent addressed this but have not been popularised. Currently many centres still consider endoscopic gastrostomies as the first line unless patients are too unwell to undergo this procedure or previous attempts have failed, in which case radioloically inserted gastrostomies are the technique of choice.
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