| Literature DB >> 32307662 |
Amy C O'Brien1, Gerard M Healy1, Nicholas Rutledge2, Aishan Patil3, Jeffrey W J McCann1, Colin P Cantwell4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: CT bleeding study (CTA) is regularly requested in acute abdominal haemorrhage (AAH) with haemodynamic instability by clinical teams and interventional radiologists because CTA can; detect arterial bleeding at low rates of hemorrhage, accurately localize the bleeding point and characterize the etiology. How best to manage an unstable patient who has an AAH with a haematoma and no acute vascular findings on CTA represents a difficult clinical scenario for treating physicians and Interventional Radiologists.Entities:
Keywords: Humans; Hemorrhage; Hemodynamics; Tomography; X-ray computed; Angiography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32307662 PMCID: PMC7167387 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-020-00112-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
Fig. 1a. Coronal reconstruction of a negative CTA. A large extraperitoneal hematoma (star) is seen in the pelvis. No active extravasation of contrast or abnormal vessel was seen on CTA. b. Posterior-anterior projection digital subtraction angiogram of the obturator branch of the anterior division of the right internal iliac artery. This was performed using an end-hole catheter inserted from a left common femoral artery access sheath. Active hemorrhage is seen from two branch arteries (black arrows)
Fig. 2Flow diagram of patients with hemodynamic instability who underwent conventional angiography (CA) procedures for acute abdominal arterial hemorrhage during the study
Review of the 14 negative CTA studies
| Patient Number | Age (years) | Sex | Clinical presentation | Conventional Angiogram finding | Embolization treatment delivered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 51 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Normal | Empiric treatment with Gelfoam |
| 2 | 29 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Active bleeding | Gelfoam and metal coils |
| 3 | 68 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Normal | Empiric treatment with Gelfoam |
| 4 | 71 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Normal | Empiric treatment with metal coils |
| 5 | 56 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Abnormal arteries | Gelfoam and metal coils |
| 6 | 43 | Male | Upper gastrointestinal bleed | Active bleeding | Metal coils |
| 7 | 75 | Male | Lower gastrointestinal bleed | Normal | Nil |
| 8 | 83 | Male | Lower gastrointestinal bleed | Normal | Nil |
| 9 | 34 | Male | Extraperitoneal pelvic haematoma post blunt trauma | Active bleeding | Metal coils |
| 10 | 37 | Male | Haematuria post renal biopsy | Pseudoaneurysm | Metal Coils |
| 11 | 72 | Male | Renal cell carcinoma and haematuria | Active bleeding | Metal Coils |
| 12 | 48 | Female | Haematuria post nephrostomy insertion | Active bleeding | Metal Coils |
| 13 –Episode 1 | 39 | Male | Haematuria after percutaneous nephrolithotomy | Normal | Empiric treatment with metal coils |
| 13 – Episode 2 | 39 | Male | Haematuria after percutaneous nephrolithotomy | Abnormal arteries | Metal coils |
CTA studies categorised by true/false positive/negative and bleeding site
| Upper gastro-intestinal bleeding ( | Lower gastro-intestinal bleeding ( | Renal ( | Liver (n = 17) | Abdominal / pelvic wall ( | Other extra-luminal sites ( | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| False negative | 3 (9%) | 0 | 4 (36%) | 0 | 1 (6%) | 0 | < 0.001 |
| True negative | 3 (9%) | 2 (8%) | 1 (9%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.09 |
| False positive | 4 (12%) | 6 (23%) | 0 | 2 (12%) | 1 (6%) | 9 (18%) | 0.46 |
| True positive | 24 (71%) | 18 (69%) | 6 (54%) | 15 (88%) | 15 (88%) | 41 (82%) | 0.18 |
| Sensitivity | 89% | 100% | 60% | 100% | 94% | 100% | |
| Specificity | 43% | 25% | 100% | NA | NA | NA | |
| Positive predictive value | 85% | 75% | 100% | 88% | 94% | 82% | |
| Negative predictive value | 51% | 100% | 20% | NA | NA | NA |
NA Not assessed