Popis: |
In patients with decompensated cirrhosis, procedure‐related bleeding is a potentially lethal complication. Routine coagulation tests such as international normalized ratio and platelet count do not predict bleeding risk. We investigated whether thromboelastography (TEG) can identify patients with cirrhosis who are at risk of procedure‐related bleeding. As a part of a prospective study on hemostasis in decompensated cirrhosis, patients had TEG performed on admission and were followed prospectively during hospitalization for the development of procedure‐related bleeding. Eighty patients with cirrhosis were included. Among the 72 who had procedures performed, 7 had procedure‐related bleeding, which was major in three cases (two following paracentesis and one following thoracentesis). Conventional coagulation tests were comparable between bleeding and nonbleeding patients, whereas TEG parameters of k‐time (4.5 minutes vs. 2.2 minutes; P = 0.02), α‐angle (34° vs. 59°; P = 0.003), and maximum amplitude (37 mm vs. 50 mm; P = 0.004) were significantly different (all indicative of hypocoagulability). TEG maximum amplitude (MA), a marker of overall clot stability, accurately discriminated between patients who had major, life‐threatening bleeding (all with MA 30 mm), whereas a platelet count |