Successful Treatment of Bleeding Duodenal Varix by Percutaneous Transsplenic Embolization

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Abstract

Variceal bleeding occurs primarily in the esophagus or stomach in patients with liver cirrhosis, but can also occur rarely in the duodenum. Duodenal variceal bleeding has a high mortality and poor prognosis due to heavy blood flow originating from the portal vein (PV) and the technical difficulty of hemostatic procedures. Treatments including endoscopic sclerotherapy, endoscopic ligations, endoscopic clipping and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt have been tried, with only moderate and variable success. A percutaneous transsplenic approach offers another way of accessing the PV. Here we report a case of successfully treated duodenal variceal bleeding by percutaneous transsplenic embolization.

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Kang, D. H., Park, J. W., Jeon, E. Y., Kim, S. E., Kim, J. H., Kwon, Y. S., … Park, C. K. (2015). Successful Treatment of Bleeding Duodenal Varix by Percutaneous Transsplenic Embolization. The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology = Taehan Sohwagi Hakhoe Chi, 66(5), 286–290. https://doi.org/10.4166/kjg.2015.66.5.286

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