Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgical Studies, The Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street, London W1N 8AA, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Haemorrhage is a life-threatening complication in pancreatic disease. Twenty-five patients with this complication are described; 15 had major bleeding, nine had minor bleeding and one patient had a pseudoaneurysm identified at operation. Of the 15 patients with major bleeding, six presented with this complication and in nine cases it followed pancreatic resection. Of the six patients who presented with major bleeding, five underwent resection with one death while the patient managed conservatively died. The nine patients who had major bleeding after pancreatic resection were managed by ligation of the bleeding artery in six cases with one death, and one patient who rebled after ligation of the bleeding artery was successfully managed by further resection. Three patients with postresection major bleeding were managed conservatively with one death. All minor haemorrhages were managed conservatively without mortality. Deaths after major bleeding were a result of sepsis in three cases and respiratory failure in one. The severity of the underlying pancreatitis was an important factor in two patients. Pseudocysts and pancreatic fistulae were important underlying factors leading to the complication. It is recommended that patients with sepsis, a pancreatic fistula or severe underlying pancreatitis should have their haemorrhage treated by pancreatic resection, while those patients with bleeding following pancreatic resection without such complications can be managed by ligation.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
71 articles.
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