Best practice & research. Clinical gastroenterology
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Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol · Jan 2008
ReviewUsefulness of prognostic indices in upper gastrointestinal bleeding.
Upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage remains a significant cause of hospital admission, with mortality rates up to 14%. In order to standardise and improve care, various scoring systems (e.g. Rockall, Blatchford and Baylor) have been developed to identify those individuals at high risk of requiring treatment (transfusion, endoscopic or surgical intervention) or of re-bleeding or death. ⋯ Most scoring systems are developed to predict outcomes in non-variceal bleeding. However, several indices are used to predict the outcome of advanced liver disease, including Child-Pugh and the Model of End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD). This chapter reviews all these aspects of the various scoring systems.
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Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours are rare tumours ( approximately 1/100,00 population/year) of which 60% are non-functioning. Except for insulinoma all types are malignant in >50% of cases. In multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN)1, pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours occur in 40-80% of patients and are mostly non-functioning tumours or gastrinomas. ⋯ The local treatment for liver metastases is now well established and options include liver resection, chemoembolisation and radiofrequency ablation. Systemic therapies have also been better defined and include radionuclide therapy against somatostatin receptors or MIBG and chemotherapy especially for poorly differentiated tumours. A number of novel agents are currently in clinical development.
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Sedation for endoscopy provides comfort for the patient and better examination conditions for the endoscopist. The high costs of providing anaesthesia by specialists and the relative lack of specialist personnel in many countries have led to the wider introduction of sedation delivered by non-anaesthesiologists. ⋯ Several conditions have to be fulfilled to provide proper and safe non-anaesthesiologist sedation for endoscopy, especially when propofol is to be used. These conditions include formal training, supervision by anaesthesiology staff, and definition of standard operating procedures on the national as well as local levels.
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Cirrhosis is known to be associated with numerous cardiovascular abnormalities. These include increased cardiac output and decreased arterial pressure and total peripheral resistance. Despite this increased baseline cardiac output, patients with cirrhosis show an attenuated systolic and diastolic function in the face of pharmacological, physiological and surgical stresses, as well as cardiac electrical abnormalities such as QT prolongation. ⋯ Cirrhotic cardiomyopathy is believed to contribute to the cardiac dysfunction that can be observed in patients with transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent-shunt insertion and liver transplantation. Insufficient cardiac contractile function may also play a role in the pathogenesis of hepatorenal syndrome precipitated by spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. In this review, the clinical features, pathogenic mechanisms, clinical consequences and management options for cirrhotic cardiomyopathy are discussed.
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Two pulmonary vascular disorders can occur in liver disease and/or portal hypertension: the hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS), which is characterized by intrapulmonary vascular dilatations, and portopulmonary hypertension (POPH), in which pulmonary vascular resistance is elevated. POPH and HPS are characterized by distinct pulmonary microvascular remodelling, which occurs at different anatomical sites of the pulmonary microcirculation. The exact pathophysiological mechanisms of these pulmonary vascular disorders are unknown. ⋯ The clinical presentations are very different, with gas exchange impairment in HPS and hemodynamic failure in POPH. The severity of HPS seems to parallel the severity of liver failure, whereas no simple relationship has been identified between hepatic impairment and the severity of POPH. Resolution of HPS is common after liver transplantation, which has an uncertain effect in POPH.