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Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding, An issue of Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, Volume 43-4 (Hardcover, 43 Ed)
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Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding, An issue of Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, Volume 43-4 (Hardcover, 43 Ed)
Series: The Clinics: Internal Medicine
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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This issue of Gastroenterology Clinics of North America is all
about acute upper GI bleeding and is divided into two distinct
sections: section I is devoted to nonvariceal upper GI bleeding and
section II is devoted to variceal upper GI bleeding. Acute
nonvariceal upper GI bleeding may originate from the esophagus,
stomach, or duodenum, essentially anywhere proximal to the Ligament
of Treitz. In Section I, Dr Gianluca Rotondano, Hospital Maresca,
Torre del Greco, Italy, begins with a review of the epidemiology
and diagnosis of acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding. We then turn
to patient presentation, risk stratification, and how to initially
medically manage these bleeding patients. I am pleased to have one
of our emergency medicine colleagues, Dr Andrew Meltzer, Department
of Emergency Medicine, George Washington University, contribute
this important article and provide a unique viewpoint from the
emergency department where most of these patients initially
present. As we all know, endoscopic hemostasis is the accepted
standard of care for patients with acute nonvariceal upper GI
bleeding. Moreover, peptic ulcer bleeding is the most common
nonvariceal cause of acute upper GI bleeding; thus, Drs Yidan Lu,
Yen-I Chen, and Alan Barkun from McGill University, Montreal,
Canada, provide an in-depth review of the endoscopic management of
peptic ulcer bleeding. Drs Eric Tjwa, I. Lisanne Holster, and Ernst
Kuipers from the Erasmus Medical Center University Hospital,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, review the endoscopic management of all
other causes of acute nonvariceal upper GI bleeding, and in
addition, Drs Louis Wong Kee Song and Michael Levy from the Mayo
Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota discuss emerging endoscopic hemostasis
treatments, such as topical sprays and over-the-scope clipping
devices. Although endoscopic hemostasis is very highly effective,
there are unfortunately cases where bleeding is unable to be
controlled or when significant rebleeding occurs that is not
amenable to endoscopic therapy. Therefore, I have included two
articles that provide insight into the question.what if endoscopic
hemostasis fails? The first article, written by Drs Philip Wai Yan
Chiu and James Yun Wong Lau, from Prince of Wales Hospital, The
Chinese University of Hong Kong, focuses on tried and true surgical
treatment options. The second article, by Dr Sujal Nanavati,
University of California at San Francisco, Department of Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, addresses the alternative treatment
strategy of angiographic embolization, which has now emerged as the
often preferred salvage treatment strategy. One of the most feared
complications of cirrhosis and portal hypertension is variceal
hemorrhage. In Section II of this issue, the focus is on variceal
causes of acute upper GI bleeding. Usually due to esophageal
variceal rupture, this complication occurs in an entirely different
epidemiologic and clinical setting than nonvariceal upper GI
bleeding. Thus, this topic requires an understanding of many
critical issues, including diagnosis and management. We begin
Section II with a review of the epidemiology, diagnosis, and early
patient management strategies in bleeding esophagogastric varices
by Drs Sumit Kumar, Sumeet Asrani, and Patrick Kamath from Mayo
Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota. Drs Jawad Ilyas and Fasiha Kanwal
from the Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas go on to
present the latest evidence on primary prophylaxis of variceal
bleeding, both medical and endoscopic. However, for those patients
who present with acute esophagogastric variceal bleeding,
endoscopic management is the cornerstone of patient management. Drs
Andres Cardenas, Anna Baiges, Virginia Hernandez-Gea, and Juan
Carlos Garcia-Pagan from the GI/Endoscopy Unit and Barcelona
Hepatic Hemodynamic Laboratory, Liver Unit, Barcelona, Spain,
provide an evidence-based review of endoscopic hemostasis
techniques in acute esophageal variceal bleeding, and Drs Frank
Weilert and Kenneth Binmoeller from Waikato Hospital, Hamilton, New
Zealand and the California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco,
respectively, discuss the recommended endoscopic management of
bleeding gastric varices, including emerging techniques such as
EUS-guided intravascular therapies. Next, Drs Sanjaya Satapathy and
Arun Sanyal contribute a comprehensive review of nonendoscopic
management strategies for esophagogastric variceal bleeding, and
last but not least, Drs Kamran Qureshi and Abdullah Al-Osaimi, from
Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, discuss how to
manage the patient with portal hypertensive gastropathy and gastric
antral vascular ectasia (also known as watermelon stomach).
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