Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Best hemoclips to stop bleeding stomach ulcers in dogs
By Jensen, Dennis M et al.Ā·Published in Gastrointestinal endoscopyĀ·2006Ā·CURE Hemostasis Research Group, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Randomized controlled study of 3 different types of hemoclips for hemostasis of bleeding canine acute gastric ulcers.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of seven adult dogs with bleeding stomach ulcers were treated with three different types of hemoclips to stop the bleeding. All three types of clips worked well to control the bleeding, and there were no major complications. The dogs received proton pump inhibitors to help heal the ulcers, and while the retention of one type of clip was lower in the short term, another type showed better retention over a longer period. Overall, all hemoclips were safe and did not hinder the healing of the ulcers.
People also search for: dog bleeding stomach ulcer treatment Ā· hemoclips for dog ulcers Ā· dog gastric ulcer healing time
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mechanical closure of bleeding vessels is clinically appealing, and several types of hemoclips are now marketed for endoscopic hemostasis of nonvariceal lesions. No comparative data have been reported on ease of clip placement, hemostasis efficacy, or clip retention rates on bleeding ulcers. OBJECTIVE: To compare 3 different types of hemoclips for hemostasis of bleeding ulcers. DESIGN: Randomized controlled study. SUBJECTS: Seven adult dogs with prehepatic portal hypertension were heparinized, and acute gastric ulcers were made with jumbo biopsy forceps. Animals had oral proton pump inhibitors daily and weekly endoscopies to quantitate clip retention and ulcer healing. INTERVENTIONS: Bleeding ulcers were randomized in pairs (2 for each treatment/dog) to endoscopic hemoclip treatment or control. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Initial times and success of deployment, hemostasis efficacy, clip retention rates, and ulcer healing during endoscopic follow-ups. RESULTS: There was no difference in initial hemostasis rates of hemoclips, and no major complications occurred. Ulcer healing times were faster (Resolution Clip [RC] or TriClip [TC]) or similar (QuickClip2 [QC]) to controls. Clip retention at 1 week was significantly less with TC and, at 3 to 7 weeks, was significantly higher with RC. CONCLUSIONS: (1) For the 3 hemoclip devices, initial hemostasis rates were 100%, but all devices required similar learning time to place clips successfully. (2) Short-term retention rates of TC were significantly less than QC or RC. (3) Long-term clip retention was significantly higher with RC. (4) All 3 hemoclips were safe, and none interfered with ulcer healing.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17055872/