Di Felice G
Department of Surgery, U.L.S.S. No. 3, Belluno, Italy.
Surg Endosc. 1991;5(1):24-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00591382.
We have carried out a retrospective review of 61 patients with Mallory-Weiss syndrome, 9 of whom underwent hemostatic injection treatment. At emergency endoscopy, 3 patients (5%) were actively bleeding and 6 (10%) had stigmata of recent hemorrhage. Fifty-two patients had a lesion of the cardia which was the suspected source of bleeding in 33 cases (54%). In the remaining 19 cases (31%) this site was not considered responsible because other sites of bleeding were present in the upper gastrointestinal tract. The 9 patients with active bleeding or stigmata of recent hemorrhage underwent injection treatment and the other 52 patients were treated with H2 antagonists. The low rebleed rate and the zero mortality recorded in this series indicate that endoscopy is the optimum method for diagnosis and treatment of patients with Mallory-Weiss syndrome.