Volume 6, Issue 4 pp. 673-675
Original Article
Free Access

Use of propranolol to reduce the rebleeding rate during injection sclerotherapy prior to variceal obliteration

David Westaby M.D.

Corresponding Author

David Westaby M.D.

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England===Search for more papers by this author
Walter Melia

Walter Melia

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

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John Hegarty

John Hegarty

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

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Alexander E. S. Gimson

Alexander E. S. Gimson

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

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Anthony J. Stellon

Anthony J. Stellon

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

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Roger Williams

Roger Williams

The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital and Medical School, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, England

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First published: July/August 1986
Citations: 80

Abstract

In a prospective, randomized controlled trial, 53 patients with variceal hemorrhage from portal hypertension, including 44 with cirrhosis, were allocated, after initial control of the bleeding, to treatment by sclerotherapy alone, or by this together with oral propranolol in a dose sufficient to reduce resting pulse rate by 25% during the period up to the time when varices were obliterated. Eight of the 27 patients undergoing sclerotherapy alone rebled during this period as compared to 7 of the 26 patients in the additional propranolol group (p > 0.80), two patients from each group dying from uncontrollable variceal hemorrhage. Propranolol precipitated encephalopathy in one patient and complicated resuscitation following bleeding in a second, and as there was no evidence in this study that use of the drug reduced the frequency or severity of the variceal bleeding, its administration cannot be recommended during the period prior to obliteration of varices by sclerotherapy.

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