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Embolization of arterial gastrointestinal hemorrhage with Fuaile medical adhesive.
BACKGROUND: To investigate the safety and effectiveness of Fuaile medical adhesive (FAL) with superselective catheterization in endovascular embolotherapy for the treatment of gastrointestinal hemorrhage (GIH) that was unresponsive to internal medicine treatment and gastroscopy management.
METHODS: A total of 25 patients with GIH, confirmed using angiography but with failed results after internal medicine treatment or gastroscopy were retrospectively analyzed. A mixture of lipiodol and FAL (1:1) was used to embolize the bleeding vessels. In the follow-up, the operation time, FAL amount, technical success rate, clinical success rate, postoperative complications, and survival conditions were compared and analyzed.
RESULTS: Among the 25 patients with GIH, FAL was applied alone in 23 patients and microcoil combined with FAL was applied in two patients. Hemostasis was successfully achieved in all patients. Two patients treated with embolotherapy experienced relapse of bleeding within 30 days but achieved successful hemostasis with FAL. Four patients died during follow-up: three patients died of advanced cancer and one patient died of severe infection induced by necrotizing pancreatitis. Three patients developed postoperative intestinal ischemic symptoms, which resolved spontaneously in two patients. In one patient, abdominal pain progressively aggravated. This patient underwent surgical resection, which confirmed the presence of colonic neoplasms. The intraoperative view revealed obvious ischemia of the local normal bowel near the tumor; however, the patient finally recovered and was discharged after surgery. The remaining patients exhibited good survival during the postoperative follow-up.
CONCLUSION: FAL embolotherapy has a high success rate for arterial GIH that was unresponsive to internal medicine treatment and gastroscopy management, with low postoperative rates of bleeding and complications; thus, this method has a high cost-efficacy.
METHODS: A total of 25 patients with GIH, confirmed using angiography but with failed results after internal medicine treatment or gastroscopy were retrospectively analyzed. A mixture of lipiodol and FAL (1:1) was used to embolize the bleeding vessels. In the follow-up, the operation time, FAL amount, technical success rate, clinical success rate, postoperative complications, and survival conditions were compared and analyzed.
RESULTS: Among the 25 patients with GIH, FAL was applied alone in 23 patients and microcoil combined with FAL was applied in two patients. Hemostasis was successfully achieved in all patients. Two patients treated with embolotherapy experienced relapse of bleeding within 30 days but achieved successful hemostasis with FAL. Four patients died during follow-up: three patients died of advanced cancer and one patient died of severe infection induced by necrotizing pancreatitis. Three patients developed postoperative intestinal ischemic symptoms, which resolved spontaneously in two patients. In one patient, abdominal pain progressively aggravated. This patient underwent surgical resection, which confirmed the presence of colonic neoplasms. The intraoperative view revealed obvious ischemia of the local normal bowel near the tumor; however, the patient finally recovered and was discharged after surgery. The remaining patients exhibited good survival during the postoperative follow-up.
CONCLUSION: FAL embolotherapy has a high success rate for arterial GIH that was unresponsive to internal medicine treatment and gastroscopy management, with low postoperative rates of bleeding and complications; thus, this method has a high cost-efficacy.
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