| Literature DB >> 33555480 |
Renato Farina1, Pietro Valerio Foti2, Andrea Conti2, Francesco Aldo Iannace2, Isabella Pennisi2, Luigi Fanzone2, Corrado Inì2, Federica Libra2, Francesco Vacirca2, Giovanni Failla2, Davide Baldanza2, Stefano Palmucci2, Serafino Santonocito2, Antonio Basile2.
Abstract
Vascular compression syndromes are rare alterations that have in common the compression of an arterial and/or venous vessel by contiguous structures and can be congenital or acquired. The best known are the Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, Nutcracker Syndrome, May-Thurner Syndrome, and Dunbar Syndrome. The incidence of these pathologies is certainly underestimated due to the non-specific clinical signs and their frequent asymptomaticity. Being a first-level method, Ultrasound plays a very important role in identifying these alterations, almost always allowing a complete diagnostic classification. If in expert hands, this method can significantly contribute to the reduction of false negatives, especially in the asymptomatic population, where the finding of the aforementioned pathologies often happens randomly following routine checks. In this review, we briefly discuss the best known vascular changes, the corresponding ultrasound anatomy, and typical ultrasound patterns.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal ultrasound; Color Doppler ultrasound; Dunbar syndrome; Duplex Doppler ultrasound; May–Thurner syndrome; Nutcracker syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33555480 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-020-00202-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasound J ISSN: 2524-8987