Pleuropulmonary complications of esophageal variceal sclerotherapy with absolute alcohol.
2003
Background: Esophageal variceal sclerotherapy (EVS) is an effective means of controlling variceal hemorrhage. However, it causes a wide variety of local and systemic complications. The present study was performed to document pleuropulmonary complications of EVS with absolute alcohol.
Methods: Twenty-six patients of portal hypertension of different etiologies were subjected to EVS with absolute alcohol. Baseline arterial blood gas analysis (PaO2, PaCO2, pH, HCO3, SaO2), chest X-ray and pulmonary function tests (forced expiratory volume at 1 s (FEV1), forced expiratory vital capacity (FVC), FEV1/FVC, maximum mid-expiratory flow rate (MMFR), and peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR)) were performed 4–6 h before the first session of EVS. These investigations were repeated within 24 h of EVS. Patients were asked to maintain a symptom diary and to record symptoms such as fever, chest pain, dysphagia and dyspnea during the study period.
Results: Ten patients (38.46%) had chest pain and four patients (15.68%) had fever after sclerotherapy. Eight patients (30.54%) complained of dyspnea and six patients (23.08%) developed pleural effusion. There was a significant decline in FVC and FEV1 after EVS as compared with baseline values. However, FEV1/FVC ratio, MMFR and PEFR did not have any significant change.
Conclusions: Chest pain (38.46%), dyspnea (30.54%) and fever (15.68%) were the common symptoms after EVS while chest X-ray showed pleural effusion in 23.08%. Pulmonary function tests revealed a significant decline in FEV1 and FVC without change in FEV1/FVC ratio after EVS, suggesting a restrictive type of defect.
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