Percutaneous transhepatic portacaval shunt for high-risk esophageal varices.

Hepatogastroenterology

Department of Medicine, Kakizoe Hospital, Nagasaki, Japan.

Published: December 1994

Percutaneous transhepatic portacaval shunt (PTPS) was performed in a patient with high-risk esophageal varices prior to sclerotherapy. PTPS was accomplished with the aid of two catheters. The first catheter was placed in the right hepatic vein under ultrasonographic guidance, and the second was placed in the portal vein. The two catheters were then connected together. The color of the esophageal varices changed from blue to white, and serum protein levels were increased 8 weeks after PTPS. Sclerotherapy was then performed without any difficulty. PTPS is the easy and quick method of performing a portacaval shunt and may have importance for the management of patients with high-risk esophageal varices prior to the treatment of sclerotherapy or liver transplantation.

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