Saturday, September 29, 2012

1980 study of Mallory-Weiss tears: Over half associated with binge drinking; 1 in 30 died

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7414517


 1980 Sep;88(3):400-5.

Mallory-Weiss syndrome: analysis of fifty-nine cases.

Abstract

Fifty-nine patients with Mallory-Weiss gastroesophageal lacerations are described. These patients consisted of 6% of all cases of upper gastrointestinal tract hemorrhage we evaluated. The most common symptoms were hematemesis (92%) and retching (61%). A history of chronic alcoholism was present in 69.5%, and recent binge drinking in 52.5% of our patients. Diagnosis was made endoscopically (55 patients) or surgically (four patients). Two deaths occurred in the 51 patients who were managed nonoperatively and two deaths occurred in the eight patients who underwent surgery. None of the deaths was related to delay in operative treatment. Eleven patients had late rebleeding, but in only three of these patients was this due to recurrent Mallory-Weiss lesions. We believe the Mallory-Weiss laceration can now be considered to be a relatively benign condition that can be managed successfully by nonoperative means in the majority of cases.

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