ResearcherID - CLICK HERE Scientific Journal Impact Factor (SJIF-2020) - CLICK HERE

TITLE:

REGULATION OF OCCURRENCE OF GASTRO OESOPHAGEAL VARICES INSIDE LIVER CIRRHOSIS

AUTHORS:

Dr. Jam Muhammad Faisal Qadir, Dr Sameen Khawaja, Dr Sana Chaudhry

ABSTRACT:

Abstract: Background: Gastroesophageal varies might be existing as one of problem of liver cirrhosis. Objective: The objective of this current research was to regulate occurrence of gastro esophageal varices in liver cirrhosis. Methodology: Our research was the cross-sectional research study, agreed out at Mayo Hospital Lahore from May to January 2017. The patients of liver cirrhosis identified on medical doubt also radiological results of coarse reverberation touch of liver, widened portal vein extra than 1cm by or else deprived of ascites dropping in teen Pugh class B and C remained encompassed. The patients remained encompassed of together sexes by age range of 21-71 years. Those patients then experienced high GI endoscopy at identical organization also remained observed for gastro esophageal varices. Information study was completed via using SPSS version 21. Results: In the current research study, here remained over-all 110 patients, out of those 66 (62%) stayed males also 44 (38%) remained women. The average age remained 54± 12 years. Gastric varices remained understood in 15 (13%) of patients. Gastric varices remained suggestively tall in patients having teen Pugh class C anywhere it remained gotten in 13 (18.15%) of patients through p= 0.05. This remained similarly expressively tall in patients that had period of liver cirrhosis extra than 6 years anywhere it remained understood in 14 (21.97%) of patients having p value of 0.002. Conclusion: Gastro esophageal varices are not unusual in patients of liver cirrhosis also it is suggestively tall in patients having period of cirrhosis added 5 years also teen Pugh class C. Key words: Cirrhosis, Varices, Teen Pugh period.

FULL TEXT

Top
  • Follows us on
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.