Unsuspected perforation in bleeding duodenal ulcers.

Autor: Dasmahapatra KS; Surgical Service, VA Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey 07019., Suval W, Machiedo GW
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The American surgeon [Am Surg] 1988 Jan; Vol. 54 (1), pp. 19-21.
Abstrakt: A combination of bleeding and perforation rarely occurs simultaneously in peptic ulcer disease. The charts of 127 patients undergoing surgery for either complication were reviewed (bleeding, 91; perforation, 36). Nine of 91 (9.9%) patients in the bleeding group were found at operation to have a unsuspected perforated duodenal ulcer. The operative mortality in the patients with the combined complications (44%, 4/9) was significantly higher than that in patients with bleeding alone (8/82, 9.8, P less than 0.001) or those with perforation alone (4/36, 11.00, P less than 0.025). The mean age of nonsurvivors was significantly higher than that of the survivors (74 +/- 8.01 vs 50.4 +/- 5.65 years, P less than 0.005). The duration of symptoms until operation was longer in patients who died (63 +/- 12.7 hours) than in survivors (40.2 +/- 6.02 hours, P = NS). All patients who died, and three of five survivors, had preoperative fever (greater than 99.0 F), leukocytosis (greater than 12,000/mm3), and persistent tachycardia despite adequate hydration and blood replacement. Perforation in bleeding peptic ulcers is not an uncommon finding, and was present in 9.9 per cent of patients. The presenting symptom of bleeding may obscure signs of perforation, delay surgery, and contribute to the higher mortality rate. The presence of fever, leukocytosis, and tachycardia despite adequate fluid and blood replacement warrants a suspicion of perforation in patients with bleeding peptic ulcer.
Databáze: MEDLINE