| Literature DB >> 33956262 |
Rafael Kiyuze de Freitas1, Lucas Moretti Monsignore2, Luis Henrique de Castro-Afonso2, Guilherme Seizem Nakiri2, Jorge Elias-Junior3, Valdair Francisco Muglia3, Sandro Scarpelini4, Daniel Giansante Abud2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: An increasing number of polytraumatized patient presenting with active abdominal pelvic bleeding (APB) have been treated by endovascular selective embolization. However, reports on evaluate the efficacy, safety and complications caused by this technique have been limited. The aim of this study was to assess the safety and efficacy of embolization of APB using N-butyl cyanoacrylate glue (NBCA).Entities:
Keywords: Hemorrhage; Interventional radiology; Trans-arterial embolization; Wounds and injuries
Year: 2021 PMID: 33956262 PMCID: PMC8102658 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-021-00222-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
Fig. 1(a) Computed tomography (CT) image after endovenous contrast injection, depicting contrast deposition inside the right kidney. (b) Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) with injection from right renal artery showing pseudoaneurysm (white arrow), best seen in image (c) with a DSA performed by a microcatheter (black arrow) in the segmentar renal artery. (d) After embolization, glue cast (white arrow heads) in a subtracted image in the renal territory after embolization with complete superseletiva exclusion of the injured vessel from the circulation
Clinical data of patients
| Clinical data (N) | Total population ( |
|---|---|
| Age, years (median, range) | 38.6 (3–81) |
| Male, (n, %) | 41 (87.2) |
| Region of trauma (n, %) | |
| Abdominal | 33 (70.2) |
| Pelvic | 14 (29.8) |
| Potentially injured organs (n, %) | |
| Liver | 18 (38) |
| Pelvis | 14 (29.8) |
| Spleen | 9 (18.9) |
| Kidney | 3 (6.4) |
| Abdominal wall | 2 (4.6) |
| Adrenal | 1 (2.3) |
| Type of trauma (n, %) | |
| Automobile | 32 (68) |
| Knife wounds | 6 (12.7) |
| Fall from height | 8 (17) |
| Others | 1 (2.3) |
Fig. 2(a, b) CT image arterial phase after endovenous contrast injection, depicting contrast deposition inside the right liver lobe (black arrowhead). (c, d) DSA with Pigtail cateter injection in aorta showing contrast extravasation (white arrow), seen in image (e) with a DSA performed by a Cobra 2 catheter (black arrow) in the celiac trunk. (f) After embolization, glue cast (white arrowhead) in a subtracted image in the liver territory after embolization with complete superseletiva exclusion of the injured vessel from the circulation
Imaging data
| Total population ( | |
|---|---|
| Admission (n, %) | |
| CT | 46 (97,8) |
| DSA | 1 (2,2) |
| DSA (n, %) | 47 (100) |
| CT Finding | |
| Contrast Extravasation | 36 (78,2) |
| Others | 1 (6,4) |
| Without finding | 9 (15,4) |
| DSA finding | |
| Contrast Extravasation | 44 (93,6) |
| Others | 3 (6,4) |
DSA digital subtraction angiography, CT computed tomography
Fig. 3(a, b, c) CT image venous phase (a) and arterial phase (b, c) after endovenous contrast injection, depicting contrast deposition inside the right adrenal gland (white arrowhead). (d) DSA with injection right renal artery showing contrast extravasation (white arrow). (e) DSA with injection right adrenal artery showing glue cast (black arrow) in a subtracted image in the adrenal territory after embolization with complete superseletiva exclusion of the injured vessel from the circulation. (f) Subtraction image showing glue cast (black arrow)
Procedures and results
| Total population ( | |
|---|---|
| Technical Success (n, %) | 47 (100) |
| Clinical Success (n, %) | 47 (100) |
| Embolic material | NBCA (100) |
| Complications (n, %) | 0 (0) |
| Mortality (n, %) | 7 (14,8) |
| Clinical decompensation | 4 (57,1) |
| Brain injury | 3 (42,9) |
NBCA N-Butyl Cyanoacrylate