Literature DB >> 24136646

Acute bleeding in the head and neck: angiographic findings and endovascular management.

L-B Zhao1, H B Shi, S Park, D G Lee, J H Shim, D H Lee, D C Suh.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Life-threatening bleeding in the head and neck requires urgent management. This study evaluated the angiographic findings related to head and neck bleeding and presents endovascular management techniques.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Sixty-one consecutive patients who presented with acute bleeding in the head and neck areas and subsequently underwent endovascular therapy between January 2002 and October 2012 were included in our study. We evaluated the angiographic findings, techniques, and results of endovascular management.
RESULTS: Contrast leakage (n = 10), pseudoaneurysm (n = 20), or both (n = 10) were the most common life-threatening angiographic findings (66%) and were the foci of immediate embolization or endoluminal vessel reconstruction. Seventeen patients (28%) had hypervascular staining of the tumor or mucosa, and 4 patients (6%) did not have any abnormal findings. The acute bleeding was successfully controlled by endovascular management according to the bleeding foci. Carotid arterial lesions, so-called "carotid blowout," required reconstructive or deconstructive therapy. Bleeding of the external carotid artery required specific branch embolization by a combination of various embolic materials. No procedure-related complications occurred except in 1 patient who experienced acute infarction caused by thromboemboli from the covered stent. Seventeen patients (28%) were retreated due to rebleeding after the mean 20-month follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS: Contrast leakage or a pseudoaneurysm or both seen on angiography are active bleeding foci and targets for therapy in patients with acute bleeding in the head and neck area. Despite different bleeding-control strategies according to vessel involvement, endovascular treatment is safe and effective for controlling hemorrhage.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24136646      PMCID: PMC7965746          DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A3761

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol        ISSN: 0195-6108            Impact factor:   3.825


  24 in total

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Authors:  D T Lanigan; J Hey; R A West
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5.  Transarterial embolization for acute head and neck bleeding: eight-year experience with emphasis on rebleeding risk in cancer patients.

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6.  Major vascular complications of orthognathic surgery: hemorrhage associated with Le Fort I osteotomies.

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8.  Life-threatening common carotid artery blowout: rescue treatment with a newly designed self-expanding covered nitinol stent.

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Authors:  L Ardekian; N Samet; Y Shoshani; S Taicher
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10.  Patients with head and neck cancers and associated postirradiated carotid blowout syndrome: endovascular therapeutic methods and outcomes.

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Review 2.  Carotid blowout syndrome: modern trends in management.

Authors:  Carlos Suárez; Verónica Fernández-Alvarez; Marc Hamoir; William M Mendenhall; Primoz Strojan; Miquel Quer; Carl E Silver; Juan P Rodrigo; Alessandra Rinaldo; Alfio Ferlito
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3.  Impending Carotid Blowout Stabilization Using an LT-D Tube.

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