| Literature DB >> 32026228 |
Francesco Giurazza1, Fabio Corvino2, Errico Cavaglià2, Mattia Silvestre2, Gianluca Cangiano2, Francesco Amodio2, Giuseppe De Magistris2, Raffaella Niola2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We report our experience in managing iatrogenic renal bleedings after nephrostomic procedures by transarterial embolization using Micro Vascular Plug (MVP) (Medtronic, USA) as single or complementary embolization device with parenchimal sparing.Entities:
Keywords: Embolization; Iatrogenic; Microvascular plug; Nephrostomy; Renal hemorrages
Year: 2019 PMID: 32026228 PMCID: PMC6966390 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-019-0087-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
Demographic details, target vessels caliber, angiographic pattern, MVP model, eventual other embolics adopted, pre- and post-embolization creatinine values
| Patient | Sex | Age | Target Artery | Vessel caliber | Angiographic pattern | MVP model | Other embolics | Pre-embolization creatinine (mg/dL) | Post-embolization creatinine (mg/dL) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 24 | Interlobar branch of inferoanterior segmental artery | 1.9 mm | Extraluminal blush | 3Q | no | 1.15 | 1.24 |
| 2 | M | 42 | Interlobar branch of inferior segmental artery | 3.2 mm | Pseudoaneurysms (3) | 5Q | no | 0.98 | 0.82 |
| 3 | M | 39 | Inferior segmental artery | 2.8 mm | Pseudoaneurysm with arterovenous fistula | 5Q | Microcoils before plug | 1.1 | 0.91 |
| 4 | F | 80 | Inferior segmental artery | 3.1 mm | Extraluminal blush | 7Q | no | 1.16 | 1.21 |
| 5 | F | 63 | Interlobar branch of inferoposterior segmental artery | 1.8 mm | Extraluminal blush and arterovenous fistula | 5Q | no | 4.31 | 3.27 |
M Male, F Female, MVP Micro vascular plug, mg Milligram, dL Deciliter
Fig. 1Patient 1. 24 years old man with double renal artery and urinary stones causing right pielectasia, treated with nephrostomy. a arterial phase CT scan reconstruction in coronal plane showing intracaliceal active bleeding (black circle); b DSA performed from the cranial renal artery showing no angiographic bleeding signs, previous CT contrast agent mixed with clots is appreciable in the calixs (black asterisks); c DSA performed from the caudal renal artery showing extraluminal blush (black asterisk) from the interlobar branch of the inferoanterior segmental artery; d superselective lobar microcatheterization confirming bleeding (black asterisk); e superselective embolization with MVP 3Q (white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP, white dotted arrow indicates the pusher wire radiopaque extremity after detachment, black dotted arrow indicates the 2.7Fr Progreat microcatheter, black arrow indicates the 5Fr diagnostic Cobra 1 catheter); f final DSA control showing no more angiographic bleeding (black shadow indicates the ischemic area, white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP)
Fig. 2Patient 4. 80 years old female with urinary stones causing right pielectasia, treated with nephrostomy. a Axial CT scan in arterial phase showing active bleeding into the urinary pelvis (black circle), clots are appreciable into the calix (black ovoid), the nephrostomy drainage with perirenal hematoma is appreciable as well; b DSA showing extraluminal blush from the inferior segmental artery (black circle); c selective embolization with MVP 7Q (white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP, black arrow indicates the 5Fr diagnostic Cobra 1 catheter); d final DSA control showing no more angiographic bleeding (black shadow indicates the ischemic area, white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP)
Fig. 3Patient 2. 42 years old man with double renal artery and urinary stones causing left pielectasia, treated with nephrostomy; this patient suffered from neonatal hypoxia with consequent tetraparesis, so the only vascular access available was right humeral artery. a prenephrostomy CT scan in coronal reconstruction showing severe ectasia of the pelvis and ureter (black asterisks); b postnephrostomy CT scan in arterial phase showing a pseudoaneurysm adjacent to the nephrostomic drainage (black circle); c DSA performed from the cranial renal artery showing no angiographic bleeding signs; d DSA performed from the caudal renal artery showing three pseudoaneurysms (black circle) from the interlobar branch of the inferior segmental artery; e selective embolization with MVP 5Q (white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP, black arrow indicates the 5Fr diagnostic Cobra 1 catheter); f final DSA control showing no more angiographic bleeding (black shadow indicates the ischemic area, white arrows indicate distal and proximal radiopaque markers of the MVP)
Published cases in literature concerning the MVP usage for the management of hemorrhage
| Authors | Year of publication | N° of Patients | Vessels embolized | MVP embolization success |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giurazza et al. | 2018 | 6 | External carotid, hepatic, renal, epigastric (2), genicular aa. | 100% |
| Bhardwaj et al. | 2017 | 1 | Duodenal varix | 100% |
| Hao et al. | 2016 | 1 | Gastroduodenal a. | 100% |
| Kleine et al. | 2015 | 4 | Facial, thyroid, vertebral (2) aa. | 75% |
N° Number, aa Arteries, MVP Micro vascular plug