| Literature DB >> 32026033 |
Keith Bertram Quencer1, Tyler Andrew Smith2.
Abstract
The spleen is the most commonly injured organ in blunt abdominal trauma. Unstable patients undergo laparotomy and splenectomy. Stable patients with lower grade injuries are treated conservatively; those stable patients with moderate to severe splenic injuries (grade III-V) benefit from endovascular splenic artery embolization. Two widely used embolization approaches are proximal and distal splenic artery embolization. Proximal splenic artery embolization decreases the perfusion pressure in the spleen but allows for viability of the spleen to be maintained via collateral pathways. Distal embolization can be used in cases of focal injury. In this article we review relevant literature on splenic embolization indication, and technique, comparing and contrasting proximal and distal embolization. Additionally, we review relevant anatomy and discuss collateral perfusion pathways following proximal embolization. Finally, we review potential complications of splenic artery embolization.Entities:
Keywords: Blunt abdominal trauma; Proximal splenic embolization; Splenic anatomy; Splenic embolization; Splenic salvage
Year: 2019 PMID: 32026033 PMCID: PMC7224246 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-019-0055-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
AAST splenic laceration grading by CT. Other findings on CT not included in AAST criteria but important for triaging patients include active extravasation and pseudoaneurysm
| Grade I | Grade II | Grade III | Grade IV | Grade V | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subcapsular hematoma extent | < 10% of surface area | 10–50% of splenic surface area | > 50% of splenic surface area, ruptured subcapsular hematoma, | N/A | N/A |
| Laceration depth | < 1 cm | 1-5 cm | >5 cm | N/A | N/A |
| Other | Laceration of vessels leading to > 25% devascularization | Shattered spleen, complete devascularization |
Summary table of key studies on splenic embolization with a level of evidence designation. Levels of evidence are defined using the grading system adapted from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and Johns Hopkins nursing evidence-based practice: Models and Guidelines (Burns et al. 2011; Dang and Dearholt 2017) - (see Table 5)
| Title, Author Year | Number of Patients | Study Design | Key Point(s), Data, Summary | Level of Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Splenic trauma: WSES classification and guidelines for adult and pediatric patients (Coccolini et al. | NA | Review | Surgical management guidelines for splenic trauma including AAST classification and recommendations for the use of non-operative treatments. Recommendations include: Consideration of angiography and/or embolization in stable patients with AAST grade I-III splenic injury. Angiography and embolization for stable AAST grade IV-V splenic injuries. | IV |
| Trauma center variation in splenic artery embolization and spleen salvage: a multicenter analysis (Banerjee et al. | 1275 | Multicenter Meta-analysis | Centers with high use of splenic artery embolization have higher spleen salvage rates and fewer nonoperative management failures. | I |
| Nonoperative management of adult blunt splenic injury with and without splenic artery embolotherapy: a meta-analysis (Requarth et al. | 10,157 | Meta-analysis | Summarizes outcomes for patients with splenic injuries with non operative management. They found a higher failure rates in patients managed with observation alone compared with splenic artery embolization. Splenic artery embolization patients also showed significantly higher splenic salvage rates in grade 4 and 5 splenic injuries. | I |
| Transcatheter arterial embolization of splenic artery aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms: short- and long-term results (Loffroy et al. | 17 | Retrospective | Compared outcomes of endovascular treatment of splenic artery aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms. They found no major complications, and concluded embolization of splenic artery aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms is a safe and effective method of splenic preservation. | II |
| The anatomy of the fundic branches of the stomach: preliminary results (Gregorczyk et al. | NA | Descriptive laboratory study | Provides an anatomic description of the arterial vascularisation of the gastric fundus in 15 human specimens. | V |
| Outcomes of Proximal Versus Distal Splenic Artery Embolization After Trauma: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (Schnuriger et al. | 479 | Meta-Analysis | Analyzes 15 studies regarding the use of both proximal and distal embolization in patients with splenic trauma. Summary of outcomes and complications for proximal vs distal splenic embolization. | I |
| Evaluation of the Amplatzer vascular plug for proximal splenic artery embolization (Widlus et al. | 14 | Retrospective | In these preliminary studies, Amplatzer vascular plugs were used successfully for proximal splenic artery embolization without any major complications. | II |
| Delayed presentation of splenic artery pseudoaneurysms following blunt abdominal trauma (Nance and Nance | 2 | Case report | Two patients with delayed presentation of splenic artery pseudoaneurysm following blunt abdominal trauma. Both vascular injuries were diagnosed on a follow up CT scan, highlighting the need for follow up imaging in patients with blunt abdominal trauma. | V |
| The impacts of different embolization techniques on splenic artery embolization for blunt splenic injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis (Rong et al. | 876 | Meta-Analysis | Comparison of PSAE vs distal embolization, and PSAE vs PSAE + distal embolization. Reports rates of success and severe complication. Lowest complications with PSAE, highest with combined proximal and distal embolization. | I |
| Conservation of the spleen with distal pancreatectomy (Warshaw | NA | Clinical examples, expert opinion | Authors describe their experience with preservation splenic vascular collateral pathways via the short gastric and gastroepiploic vessels during a distal pancreatectomy. | V |
| Laparoscopic spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomy: splenic vessel preservation compared with the Warshaw technique (Jean-Philippe et al. | 140 | Retrospective | Discusses collateral arterial pathways for splenic circulation, which are essential to splenic preservation following proximal splenic artery embolization. | II |
| Proximal splenic artery embolization for blunt splenic injury: clinical, immunologic, and ultrasound-Doppler follow-up (Bessoud et al. | 37 | Retrospective | Proximal splenic artery embolization for the treatment of splenic injury in blunt abdominal trauma is safe and preserves long term splenic function. | II |
| Splenic embolization revisited: a multicenter review (Haan et al. | 140 | Retrospective | Rebleeding following splenic embolization can occur in up to 24% of patients, but this is often treated successfully with re-embolization. Distal embolization often causes small splenic infarcts. | II |
| Non-operative management of blunt splenic injury: a 5-year experience (Haan et al. | 109 | Retrospective | Single center study showing hemodynamically stable patients with grade III – V splenic lacerations treated with PSAE have a higher likelihood of splenic salvage compared with those treated with observation alone. | II |
Levels of Evidence Adapted from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and Johns Hopkins nursing evidence-based practice: Models and Guidelines (Burns et al. 2011; Dang and Dearholt 2017)
| Level | Description |
|---|---|
| I | High quality prospective RCTs, cohort studies with adequate power or systematic review of these studies |
| II | Lower quality prospective cohort, retrospective cohort study, RCT with untreated controls, or a systematic review/meta-analysis of these studies |
| III | Case-control study or systematic review/meta-analysis of these studies |
| IV | Case Series, consensus statements, society guidelines, practice guidelines |
| V | Expert Opinion: case report, clinical example, narrative reviews |
Fig. 1Celiac angiogram (a) in a 22 yo female status post rollover motor vehicle accident with grade III splenic laceration shows the dorsal pancreatic artery (curved black arrow) arising from the proximal splenic artery. The dorsal pancreatic artery arises from the proximal splenic artery in approximately 50% of cases. Selective splenic angiogram (b) shows the great pancreatic artery (curved white arrow) arising from the mid splenic artery. Note the multifocal areas of contrast pooling within the splenic parenchyma consistent with multifocal traumatic injury
Fig. 265 year old female undergoing celiac angiogram for upper gastrointestinal bleed. Celiac DSA showing the dorsal pancreatic artery (thin arrows) arising directly from the celiac trunk (dotted black arrow), which occurs in ~ 15% of cases. The great pancreatic artery (curved black arrow) arises from the mid portion of the splenic artery. Ideal placement of coils/plugs in proximal splenic artery embolization is between these two vessels. Transverse pancreatic artery (thick black arrow)
Fig. 332 year old male in a snowmobile verses truck accident. a Celiac DSA after proximal splenic artery embolization with an AMPLATZER™ Plug (black star). Note the dorsal pancreatic artery (thin straight black arrow) originates from the common hepatic artery, a variation that occurs in approximately 20% of cases. Blood from the dorsal pancreatic artery then travels left along the transverse pancreatic artery (thick black arrows). Blood then flows retrograde up the great pancreatic artery (curved black arrow) reconstituting the mid/distal splenic artery (thick white arrow). b Subsequent image shows reconstituted flow in the mid/distal splenic artery (thick white arrow) with opacification of splenic artery branches (thin white arrows)
Fig. 452 yo male status post motor vehicle accident with grade 3 splenic injury. After coils were mistakenly placed distal to the origin of the great pancreatic artery (thin white arrow a, b), splenic artery DSA shows there is reconstitution of the distal splenic artery (thin black arrows b-d) via a great pancreatic artery to transverse pancreatic artery (thick white arrow b) to caudal pancreatic artery (curved white arrow b) pathway. The caudal pancreatic artery arises from the distal third of the splenic artery (70% of cases) or an inferior polar branch of the splenic artery (30% of cases)
Proximal vs Distal Splenic Embolization in Trauma Patients (Ahuja et al. 2015; Imbrogno and Ray 2012; Schnuriger et al. 2011; Killeen et al. 2001)
| Type | When to Perform | Goal of Therapy | Advantages | Disadvantages | Embolics | Potential Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proximal | Multifocal injury CT laceration without angiographic correlate | Decrease spleen parenchemyal perfusion pressure. | Shorter procedure times, lower radiation dose | Inability to easily perform future embolization. | Coils and/or plugs | Coil migrationa |
| Distal | Trauma patients with focal vascular injury | Selection of specific injured vessels | Selective embolization | Increased procedure time, greater risk of infarction | Coils and/or particles | Splenic infarct and/or abscess formation |
aOccurs in < 1% of cases (Haan et al. 2004)
Pearls and Pitfalls of Splenic Artery Embolization
| Plugs vs Coils | When performing PSAE, plugs may be to be technically easier and more precise than coils in the high-flow splenic artery can be technically challenging. |
| Coils | When using coils, strong consideration should be given to use of detachable coils. |
| If coils are used 0.035″ coils are preferred to 0.018″ coils given their higher radial strength. | |
| Plugs | To place. An AVP-II, the appropriately sized sheath is advanced just beyond the dorsal pancreatic artery. The plug is then advanced through the sheath, and the sheath retracted, uncovering the plug. |
| Once proper position of the plug has been determined, the plastic vise is attached to the delivery wire and turned counterclockwise until the plug is detatched. |
Fig. 5Schematic for the dorsal pancreatic (thin white arrow) to transverse pancreatic (thick white arrow) to great pancreatic artery (curved white arrow). Short black arrows denote the direction of flow. (Black star-coils in proximal splenic artery)
Fig. 6Transradial splenic angiogram following splenic trauma. After proximal splenic artery embolization using coils (black star), flow from the proximal splenic artery (straight white arrow) to the distal splenic artery (curved white arrow) is maintained via dorsal pancreatic (straight thin black arrow) to transverse pancreatic (straight thick black arrow) to great pancreatic artery (curved black arrow) pathway
Fig. 785 year old male with pancreatic cancer status post iatrogenic trauma following drain placement for a perisplenic abscess. Splenic artery DSA after embolization shows that the AMPLATZER™ Plug (white arrow) has mistakenly been placed distal to the great pancreatic artery (curved black arrow). This excludes collateral perfusion of the spleen via the dorsal pancreatic artery (straight thin black arrow) to transverse pancreatic (thick black arrows) to great pancreatic artery pathway
Fig. 8Schematic representation of collateral pathway of right gastroepiploic (thick curved black arrow) to left gastroepiploic artery (thin curved black arrow). The right gastroepiploic artery is a terminal branch of the gastrodoudenal artery (GDA; straight white arrow). It courses within the greater omentum along the greater curvature of the stomach. The left gastroepiploic artery may arise from the distal splenic or an inferior polar artery
Fig. 956 year old female, history of alcoholism, fall from standing height. Celiac artery angiogram after proximal splenic artery embolization with an AMPLATZERTM Plug (star a). This shows collateral perfusion to the spleen and distal splenic artery (straight black arrows b-d) via GDA (thin straight white arrow b, c) → right gastroepiploic (curved white arrow b-d) → left gastroepiploic pathway (curved black arrow b-d). Note that the parenchymal opacification of the spleen is markedly delayed compared to the liver, an expected finding after PSAE (d). Corkscrew intrahepatic arteries and the recannalized periumbilical vein with hepatopedal flow (thick white arrow b, c) are consistent with the patient’s known history of alcohol cirrhosis and portal hypertension
Fig. 10a Schematic of collateral splenic perfusion via the left gastric (star) to short gastric pathway (curved arrows). Note that the normal direction of flow is reversed in the short gastric arteries. b 39 year old female with history of splenic laceration caused by motor vehicle accident 11 years prior which was treated with a subtotal splenectomy as well as splenic artery and vein ligation. Left gastric artery angiogram done for bleeding gastric varices demonstrates the left gastric to short gastric to spleen collateral pathway
Fig. 1137 year old male with an AAST grade III splenic injury following high speed motor vehicle crash. a Splenic artery DSA with a catheter in the splenic artery (black arrow) demonstrating a focal pseudoaneurysm (white arrows). b A base catheter in the splenic artery (small white arrow), with a 5 F microcatheter fed through a tortuous splenic artery (large white arrow). The tortuosity and distance of this pseudoaneurysm precludes the use of traditional covered stents in this area. c Post coil embolization DSA showing a treated pseudoaneurysm. d One week after embolization, an axial contrast enhanced CT through the spleen demonstrates distal embolization coils (small white arrow), an area of focal infarction (small black arrow), and a splenic abscess (large black arrow). A partially visualized drain is present within the infected collection (large white arrow)