| Literature DB >> 30800193 |
Soumil Singhal1, Bibin Sebastian1, Rohit Madhurkar1, M C Uthappa1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The study aims to report our very early experience with prostate artery embolisation in patients with benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) in an Indian setting.Entities:
Keywords: angiography; embolization; prostate
Year: 2018 PMID: 30800193 PMCID: PMC6384402 DOI: 10.5114/pjr.2018.81318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pol J Radiol ISSN: 1733-134X
Figure 1Pelvic angiography for identification of prostate arteries. Note the following branches: superior gluteal artery (GS), inferior gluteal artery (IG), internal pudendal artery (PI), and prostate artery (P)
Figure 2Selective angiography of the bilateral prostatic artery before and after embolisation. A, C) Identification of the arterial vessels of the both halves of the gland. B, D) Postembolisation follow-up angiography showing interruption of flow in both the left prostatic arteries
Figure 3Use of Road Map Angiography in selective catheterisation of left prostatic arteries
Outcome of the procedure
| Parameter | Pre-embolisation | Post-embolisation | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| IPSS | 20 points ± 1.5 | 10 points ± 1.58 | Clinical improvement by 10 points |
| QOL | 5 points ± 0.54 | 1 point ± 0.8 | Improvement in quality of life by 4 points |
| Prostate volume | 74.25 cc ± 28.6 | 34.25 cc ± 8.26 | Prostate volume reduction of 22% |
| Postvoid residue | 54.5 ml ± 16.9 | 30.25 ml ± 3.68 | Improvement in postvoid urinary retention |
Figure 4Changes in postvoid residual volume (A), QOL score (B), IPSS (C) and prostate volume (D) in all four patients as represented by four different colors