Endoscopy 1987; 19(4): 160-163
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1018269
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Per-Endoscopic Bipolar Diathermy Coagulation of Visible Vessels using a 3.2 mm Probe - A Randomised Clinical Trial

S. Brearley1 , P.C. Hawker, P.W. Dykes, M.R.B. Keighley
  • The General Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham
  • 1Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham, England
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
17 March 2008 (online)

Summary

Forty-four patients who had bled from peptic ulcers and whose ulcers showed stigmata of haemorrhage (bleeding, visible vessel or adherent clot) entered a trial of treatment with a 3.2 mm bipolar diathermy probe. Two patients had spurting haemorrhage when endoscoped and both were treated with the probe, control being obtained in one. The remaining patients were randomised to treatment or control groups. One patient who was treated was withdrawn because the ulcer proved to be malignant. Six of 20 treated patients rebled compared with 8 of 21 controls (relative risk 0.79; 90 % C1 0.26-1.97). The operation rate, transfusion requirement and hospital stay were similar in the two groups. One perforation occurred in the treatment group. Per-endoscopic bipolar diathermy treatment confers little benefit in bleeding peptic ulcer disease.

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