Journal
CIRCULATION JOURNAL
Volume 69, Issue 3, Pages 331-334Publisher
JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOC
DOI: 10.1253/circj.69.331
Keywords
gastrointestinal disease; H-2-recepter antagonist; open heart surgery; proton pump inhibitor
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Background Upper gastrointestinal bleeding is a lethal complication after open heart surgery. We designed a prospective randomized trial to test the efficacy of different antisecretory agents to prevent upper gastrointestinal disease after operation. Methods and Results A total of 210 patients were divided into 3 groups: group I had 70 patients who had mucosal protection (teprenone 150 mg/day), group II had 70 patients who had histamine2-receptor antagonist (ranitidine 300 mg/day), and group III included 70 patients who had a proton pump inhibitor (rabeprazole 10 mg/day). Gastric fiberscopy was used in all patients postoperatively during days 5 to 7. We compared the 3 groups in terms of endoscopic findings. Four patients (5.7%) had gastric bleeding complications in each of groups I and II; 2 died of coagulopathy. In group III no patients had gastric bleeding. The incidence of hemorrhagic gastritis was significantly higher in groups I (22.9%) and II (15.7%) than in III (2.9%) (p = 0.0003). The incidence of active ulcers was also significantly higher in groups I (28.6%) and II (21.4%) than in III (4.3%) (P = 0.0001). Conclusions Early medication postoperative by a proton pump inhibitor was shown to be the most effective treatment and indeed might be described as mandatory to prevent upper gastrointestinal diseases after open heart surgery.
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