Abstract

The injection of fibrin tissue glue is a promising endoscopic method for hemostasis of peptic ulcer bleeding. So far, no clinical study has focused on the ulcer healing process after endoscopic fibrin injection. A morphological study was performed on all resection specimens from patients operated on between 1 January 1994 and 31 December 1996 for gastroduodenal ulcer bleeding with prior endoscopic injection of fibrin glue. The fibrin clot was characterized histologically for its size, location and aspect. Of 227 patients endoscopically treated with a double-lumen needle, 20 underwent resection. The interval between fibrin injection and resection ranged from 6 hours to 9 days. In 15 patients the ulcer was identified in the resection specimen. No fibrin remnants were detectable in three, sparse fibrin deposits were seen in eight and large amounts of fibrin were noted in the submucosa or subserosa in four specimens. With increasing time, the clot was gradually organized by phagocytes and angio-fibroblasts and was finally replaced by endogenous granulation tissue. An exuberant or tissue-destructive reaction did not appear. In this study, endoscopic fibrin sealing of bleeding ulcers resulted in appearance of a bland fibroblast-rich granulation tissue. The depth of fibrin glue injection is difficult to standardize with the aid of double-lumen needles.

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