Oesophageal & Gastric Varices Flashcards
What are varices?
Dilated sub-mucosal veins that have a tortuous (twisting) course
Where in the oesophagus do varcies usually occur?
In the lower 1/3rd
What problems can varices lead to?
Bleeding, which can be life threatening
What causes varices in the stomach and oesophagus?
Usually portal hypertension, a complication of cirrhosis
Also thrombosis of splenic vein, caused by acute pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer
How are oesophageal + gastric varices usually discovered?
Patients with cirrhosis are given a gastroscopy routinely, these pick up varices
OR
They present with symptoms
What are the clinical features of oesophageal + gastric varices?
Vomiting blood
Melaena (passing black, tarry stools)
Maroon stools or frank blood in the stools.
Many present in shock due to profound loss of blood.
Investigations of oesophageal + gastric varices?
Bloods: low red cell count, low platelets, long INR
Endoscopy: look for the varices and any bleeding
Treatment of oesophageal + gastric varices?
Treat the underlying cause (cirrhosis, pancreatitis)
If they are in shock, emergency resuscitation - fluids, blood
Gastric variceal obliteration
Variceal ligation or banding:
Sclerotherapy: medicine infected into vein to make it shrink
What is INR?
International normalised ratio
How long it takes for blood to clot
What are the causes of portal hypertension?
Pre-hepatic: thrombosis
Hepatic: Cirrhosis, Sarcoidosis
Post-hepatic: Right heart failure, many more