Results 221 to 230 of about 75,424 (280)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Endoscopic injection of fibrin glue versus polidocanol in peptic ulcer hemorrhage: a pilot study.

Endoscopy, 1994
In this prospective, randomized trial, bleeding gastroduodenal ulcers in the Forrest I and II stages were treated endoscopically with injection of either fibrin glue or polidocanol.
P. Berg, W. Barina, P. Born
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage: Vasopressin for a Jehovah's Witness

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1973
Excerpt To the editor: Selective arterial catheterizations have been used in recent years by others (1, 2) and by us to locate and control massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
Martin E. Gordon   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Octreotide and heater probe thermocoagulation for arrest of peptic ulcer hemorrhage. A prospective, randomized, controlled trial.

Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, 1995
We carried out a prospective, randomized, controlled trial over a 7-month period to assay the hemostatic effects of octreotide and heater probe thermocoagulation (HPT) in 54 patients with active peptic ulcer bleeding or nonbleeding visible vessels at the
H. Lin   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Surgical Mortality of Massive Hemorrhage from Peptic Ulcer

Archives of Surgery, 1961
The problem of massive gastroduodenal hemorrhage, especially from benign peptic ulceration, has been difficult to analyze because of variable statistics and methods of reporting from different centers. Confusion exists because of different modes of therapy, different types of hemorrhage, and different types of patients treated at these various centers.
Michael A. Polacek   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

THE INCIDENCE OF HEMORRHAGE OCCURRING WITH PERFORATION IN PEPTIC ULCER

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939
The impression that bleeding ulcers do not perforate and ulcer perforations do not bleed seems to be generally accepted by physicians and surgeons as true. That occurrence of bleeding and perforation together is uncommonly encountered is inferred from references stating that it is well known that bleeding ulcers rarely perforate and vice versa 1 or ...
Sherman Egan, William L. Winters
openaire   +2 more sources

Significance of gross hemorrhage in peptic ulcer

The American Journal of Surgery, 1936
Abstract The only conclusion that we can draw from these observations is that one must individualize the treatment for each hemorrhaging ulcer that is encountered. The following points should be stressed: (1) that patients may die from hemorrhage under conservative management regardless of whether they are transfused or not; (2) if the patient is ...
openaire   +2 more sources

SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF MASSIVE HEMORRHAGE FROM PEPTIC ULCER

Archives of Surgery, 1951
DURING the past 10 years the articles appearing in the medical literature on the subject of massive hemorrhage from peptic ulcer have been numerous, but rather contradictory. 1 The policies advocated have ranged from nonoperative treatment regardless of circumstances to the opposite extreme of operation on all patients actively bleeding from a peptic ...
Charles S. Harrison, Frank Glenn
openaire   +3 more sources

Hemorrhage from Peptic Ulcer: An Analysis of 223 Cases

Gastroenterology, 1952
Bleeding from the upper gastrointestinal tract has attracted the attention and aroused the interest of physicians for many years. In the period before the diagnosis of ulcer of the stomach or duodenum could be established by x-ray the existence of such lesions was suspected by certain clinicians and the role of ulcer as the cause of massive hemorrhage ...
B.D. Rosenak   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

THE TREATMENT OF MASSIVE HEMORRHAGE DUE TO PEPTIC ULCER

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939
All patients with hematemesis and melena due to peptic ulcer admitted to the Long Island College Hospital are fed immediately and repeatedly. This treatment has been employed in all ward and in a majority of private cases during the last eighteen years. The therapy was devised by Dr. Andresen 1 in 1916.
openaire   +2 more sources

TREATMENT OF MASSIVE HEMORRHAGE DUE TO PEPTIC ULCER

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1939
There is no general agreement among internists on the question of withholding or giving food to patients with bleeding peptic ulcer. Most clinicians advocate a period of fasting, the giving of fluids and transfusions when needed and rest. Allen and Benedict 1 reported 138 cases of massive hemorrhage with a mortality of 14.5 per cent.
openaire   +2 more sources

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