| Literature DB >> 26425639 |
Richard A Schatz1, Stephen Schabel2, Don C Rockey1.
Abstract
Splenic artery pseudoaneurysms are infrequently encountered but critical to recognize. Limited literature to date describes associations with pancreatitis, trauma, and rarely peptic ulcer disease. Hemorrhage and abdominal pain are the most common manifestations. There is typically overt gastrointestinal blood loss but bleeding can also extend into the peritoneum, retroperitoneum, adjacent organs, or even a pseudocyst. Most patients with ruptured splenic artery pseudoaneurysms present with hemodynamic instability. Here, we describe a patient recovering from acute illness in the intensive care unit but with otherwise no obvious risk factors or precipitants for visceral pseudoaneurysm. He presented with acute onset altered mental status, nausea, and worsening back and abdominal pain and was found to be in hypovolemic shock. The patient was urgently stabilized until more detailed imaging could be performed, which ultimately revealed the source of blood loss and explained his rapid decompensation. He was successfully treated with arterial coiling and embolization. Thus, we herein emphasize the importance of prompt recognition of hemorrhagic shock and of aggressive hemodynamic stabilization, as well as a focused diagnostic approach to this problem with specific treatment for splenic artery pseudoaneurysm. Finally, we recommend that multidisciplinary management should be the standard approach in all patients with splenic artery pseudoaneurysm.Entities:
Keywords: angiography; hemorrhage; imaging; retroperitoneum
Year: 2015 PMID: 26425639 PMCID: PMC4528868 DOI: 10.1177/2324709615577816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep ISSN: 2324-7096
Figure 1.Computed tomography scan of the abdomen and pelvis.
(A) An axial view of a contrast-enhanced portal venous phase CT scan demonstrates a 4.5 × 2.6 cm splenic artery pseudoaneurysm (short arrow) with associated retroperitoneal and perinephric fat stranding (long arrow). A dense abdominal free-fluid collection (arrowhead), likely from hemorrhage, is present. (B) A sagittal view of a contrast-enhanced portal venous phase CT scan demonstrates the splenic artery pseudoaneurysm (short arrow), associated retroperitoneal and perinephric fat stranding (long arrow), and the free-fluid collection (arrowhead).
Figure 2.Splenic artery angiography.
(A) The digital subtraction image of the splenic artery arteriogram demonstrates extravasation of contrast into a large mid splenic artery pseudoaneurysm (arrow). The angiocatheter is seen in the proximal portion of the splenic artery. Also, an aortic stent graft is also seen (diamond arrow). (B) This digital subtraction image depicts the successfully embolized splenic artery with detachable coils (arrows) throughout the course of the artery. The arteriogram confirms complete stasis of flow within the artery without residual filling of the pseudoaneurysm.
Categories of Shock.
| Category | Physiology | Common Causes | Basic Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolemic | ↓ Cardiac preload and cardiac output | • Hemorrhage | First line: Volume resuscitation |
| • Fluid losses (GI, burns) | Second line: Vasopressors | ||
| Dehydration | |||
| Cardiogenic | ↓ Stroke volume and cardiac output | Intracardiac | • Treat underlying cause |
| • Myocardial infarction | • Aggressive volume management (ie, bolus vs dieresis depending on etiology) | ||
| • Arrhythmia (ie, atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response, unstable ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation) | • Vasopressors ± inotropes | ||
| • Aortic stenosis | |||
| • Mitral regurgitation | |||
| Extracardiac | |||
| • Volume overload | |||
| • Tension pneumothorax | |||
| • Massive pulmonary embolus | |||
| • Cardiac tamponade | |||
| Distributive (septic, anaphylactic, neurogenic) | ↓ Systemic vascular resistance from ↑ vasodilatation | Severe inflammatory response with massive cytokine release (ie, infection, pancreatitis, burns), allergic reaction, spinal injury/anesthesia | First line: Volume resuscitation |
| Second line: Vasopressors | |||
| ±: Antibiotics, steroids/epinephrine |