Video Video 1 Balloon-compression endoscopic injection sclerotherapy for the treatment of esophageal varices. A 50-year-old man with schistosomiasis-induced liver fibrosis presented with melena and hematemesis. The bleeding stopped after intravenous administration of somatostatin and ceftriaxone for 4 days. Balloon-compression endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (bc-EIS) was performed with the patient under general anesthesia to prevent rebleeding. The novel device for bc-EIS is composed of a syringe, a stopcock, a catheter, and an inflatable balloon. In the majority of patients with cirrhosis, the blood flow from the coronary vein drains into the azygos and hemiazygos venous system through esophageal and para-esophageal varices, and eventually back to the inferior vena cava. With compression of proximal esophageal and para-esophageal varices via an inflated balloon, sclerosant can be retained at the injection site, rather than flowing back to the inferior vena cava. Endoscopy revealed the presence of moderately enlarged, beady esophageal varices with red wale signs in the middle and lower esophagus. An inflatable balloon was fixed to an endoscope at a distance of 3 cm from its distal end. When the end of the endoscope was introduced to the target varices, 20 mL of air was injected into the balloon through a thin catheter, making its outer diameter expand to 3.5 cm. A disposable endoscopic injection needle then entered the base of the variceal columns near the cardia. When blood flowed back into the needle, a mixture of Lauromacrogol and methylene blue was intravariceally administered. Minor bleeding at the injection site was stopped through brief compression with the needle sheath. The second injection was performed following the aforementioned procedure. Follow-up endoscopy at 1 month, 4 months, and 7 months revealed the progression from thrombosed blue varices to complete eradication of esophageal varices. Endoscopic ultrasonography also showed the absence of blood flow in the varices after treatment. To date, bc-EIS has been performed successfully on 28 patients with esophageal varices. Variceal eradication was obtained in 17 patients with 1 session, 10 patients with 2 sessions, and 1 patient with 3 sessions. Two patients showed recurrence of esophageal varices on routine follow-up endoscopy and were re-treated with bc-EIS successfully. There were no severe complications during the follow-up period. With the sclerosant retained at injection sites after balloon compression, bc-EIS enables complete eradication of esophageal varices and lowers the risk of recurrence. The blockade of sclerosant also decreases the incidence of complications related to large-volume injection of sclerosant, such as embolization, ulceration, and perforation. In conclusion, bc-EIS appears to be an effective and safe approach for the treatment of esophaeal varices. Further research is underway to determine its suitability for large-scale clinical application.
Background: The management of large esophageal varices (EVs) remains challenging because of the difficulty of endoscopic variceal ligation and fatal post-endoscopic variceal ligation bleeding ulcers. The current study evaluated the efficacy and safety of balloon-compression endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (bc-EIS) in the treatment of large EVs.Materials and Methods: This retrospective study included 105 patients with cirrhosis exhibiting large EVs (64 in the bc-EIS group and 41 in the EIS group). Primary outcomes included the initial rate of variceal eradication and intraoperative bleeding signs. Secondary outcomes included incidences of rebleeding, mortality, complications, and optimal time of balloon-compression (bc). Results:The initial rate of variceal eradication in the bc-EIS group was significantly higher than that in the EIS group (46.9 vs. 24.4%; P = 0.021). The incidence of intraoperative bleeding, which was represented as oozing and spurting, in the bc-EIS group was markedly lower than that in the EIS group (43.8 vs. 61.0% and 9.4 vs. 39.0%, respectively; P = 0.043). Patients in the bc-EIS group showed a significantly lower incidence of rebleeding (0.0 vs. 17.1%; P = 0.001). However, no significant difference in mortality rate was observed between different groups. Chest pain or discomfort tended to be more common in the EIS group than in the bc-EIS group (58.5 vs. 17.2%; P = 0.001). The cut-off value of 11.5-minutes appeared to have a maximum combined sensitivity and specificity of 80.0% and 58.8%, respectively. The area under the curve was 0.708 (95% confidence interval = 0.576-0.839; P = 0.004).Conclusion: bc-EIS could achieve a higher variceal eradication rate and milder intraoperative bleeding signs in large EVs. Furthermore, 11.5-minutes appeared to be the optimal compression time in bc-EIS.
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