pubmed-article:3261269 | pubmed:abstractText | Spontaneous massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage occurring in patients with pancreatitis is an uncommon and difficult clinical problem, especially in a tropical third world country where the underlying causes of pancreatitis and facilities for its diagnosis and management are different from those in the developed West. Of 7 such cases seen by us in 3 years, 2 were due to hemosuccus pancreaticus, 2 were due to gastric variceal hemorrhage consequent to splenic vein obstruction, and one each due to contiguous pancreatic inflammation involving the duodenum, an aneurysmal bleed from the left gastric artery and a pseudocyst rupturing into the transverse colon. A fiberoptic endoscopic examination was helpful in all the 7 cases and delineated the cause of bleeding, whereas angiography, performed in 4 patients contributed little to management. The mortality rate was 14%. It is suggested that a timely endoscopic examination during active bleeding, which may be repeated if necessary, is extremely rewarding in the diagnosis and management of such patients and often obviates the necessity of angiography which is a time-consuming and cumbersome investigation in a critically ill patient and facilities for which are usually not available in most third world country hospitals. | lld:pubmed |