Siringo S, McCormick P A, Mistry P, Kaye G, McIntyre N, Burroughs A K
Hepato-biliary and Liver Transplantation Unit, Royal Free Hospital and School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Gastrointest Endosc. 1991 Jan-Feb;37(1):51-5. doi: 10.1016/s0016-5107(91)70621-4.
The prognostic significance of the white nipple sign in variceal bleeding was evaluated prospectively in 203 separate admissions for bleeding esophageal varices in 145 cirrhotic patients. During all admissions a standardized protocol of management defined the failure of transfusion and vasoactive drugs (conservative measures) to stop bleeding and the occurrence of early rebleeding, at which time either emergency sclerotherapy or a staple transection of the esophagus was used. The finding of a white nipple in 18 admissions (9%) did not have predictive value as regards the failure of conservative measures to stop bleeding within 24 hours or rebleeding within 5 days, and there was no association with increased mortality. In one case, a white nipple was seen to occur after spontaneous cessation of a variceal venous spurt, suggesting it is a platelet-fibrin plug. The white nipple sign is diagnostic of a varix that has bled but has no adverse prognostic significance.