| Literature DB >> 24885940 |
Michele Rossi, Gianluca Maria Varano1, Gianluigi Orgera, Alberto Rebonato, Florindo Laurino, Cosimo De Nunzio.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Renal artery aneurysm is a rare disorder with a high mortality rate in the event of rupture, the most frequent complication, which can also occur in lesions smaller than those indicated for treatment by current criteria. Surgery is still the first-line treatment, although a growing trend toward endovascular management of visceral artery aneurysms has emerged because of the high efficacy and low invasiveness that has been demonstrated by several authors. Treatment of wide-necked aneurysms and, depending on location, those at renal artery bifurcations or distal branches is more complex and may require invasive surgical techniques, such as bench surgery. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24885940 PMCID: PMC4070645 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2490-14-42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Figure 1Contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography. Oblique coronal multiplanar reconstruction shows the aneurysm in the upper portion of the left kidney, originating from the anterior segmental artery.
Figure 2Digital subtraction angiography. Selective left renal injection through a transbrachial multipurpose 5-Fr catheter, with rapid injection of a wide-necked aneurysm originating from an upper-pole anterior segmental artery.
Figure 3Superselective contrast injection into the aneurysm through a dedicated microcatheter coaxially advanced inside the larger 5-Fr angiographic mother catheter, immediately before the coil deployment.
Figure 4Selective left renal artery angiography after coil deployment and detachment. There is a compact appearance of the coils and complete filling of the aneurysm with downstream vascular-tree preservation.
Figure 5Abdominal contrast-enhanced computed tomography 1 month after the procedure. Oblique coronal multiplanar reconstruction clearly shows the aneurysm exclusion from complete coil filling and normal parenchymal contrast enhancement without evidence of segmental ischemic damage.