The aim of this study was to investigate the role of portal hypertension de
termining the severity of bleeding in portal hypertensive rats. The effects
of section of branches of the ileocolic vein were studied in sham-operated
(SO), partial portal vein-ligated (PPVL), and common bile duct-ligated (CB
DL) rats. The ensuing hemorrhage was compared with that caused by section o
f femoral vein, where the portal hypertensive factor is excluded. In PPVL r
ats, section of branches of increasing size (divided into fourth, third, se
cond, and first order) resulted in increasingly severe bleeding (arterial p
ressure: down arrow +/- 4%, down arrow 6 +/- 12%, down arrow 15 +/- 8%, and
down arrow 28 +/- 13%; P < .005; hematocrit down arrow 4 + 2%, down arrow
6 +/- 1%, down arrow 7 +/- 2%, and down arrow 10 +/- 4%; P < .005). Bleedin
g from first-order branches was mild in SO, moderate in PPVL, and severe in
CBDL rats, as shown by increasing changes in arterial pressure (down arrow
3 +/- 3%, down arrow 12 +/- 16% and, down arrow 43 +/- 23%; P < .01), hema
tocrit (down arrow 4 +/- 1%, down arrow 12 +/- 2%, and down arrow 32 +/- 19
%; P < .01), and mortality (0%, 0%, and 56%, P < .001), Greater blood loss
in CBDL rats was associated with higher portal pressure (16.6 +/- 2.7 vs. 1
3.1 +/- 1.1 mm Hg in PPVL; P < .01) and more prolonged bleeding time (70 +/
- 4 vs. 35 +/- 3 seconds in PPVL; P < .001). Vessels were similarly dilated
in CBDL and PPVL (0.7 +/- 0.2 and 0.7 +/- 0.1 vs. 0.4 +/- 0.1 mm in SO; P
< .05). Section of femoral vein caused equal blood loss in SO, PPVL, and CB
DL rats, assessed by falls in hematocrit (down arrow 8 +/- 2%, down arrow 7
+ 1%, down arrow 8 +/- 1%, respectively; NS) and by the blood loss (3.6 +/
- 0.7, 3.5 +/- 0.9, and 3.8 +/- 0.7 g; NS). The study shows that the degree
of portal pressure elevation is a major determinant of the severity of por
tal hypertension-related bleeding in PPVL and CBDL rats.