| Literature DB >> 34200171 |
Massimo Venturini1,2, Filippo Piacentino1, Andrea Coppola1, Valeria Bettoni1, Edoardo Macchi1, Giuseppe De Marchi1, Marco Curti2, Christian Ossola2, Paolo Marra3, Anna Palmisano4, Alberta Cappelli5, Antonio Basile6, Rita Golfieri5, Francesco De Cobelli4, Gabriele Piffaretti2,7, Matteo Tozzi2,7, Giulio Carcano2,8, Federico Fontana1,2.
Abstract
Visceral artery aneurysms (VAAs) are rare, usually asymptomatic and incidentally discovered during a routine radiological examination. Shared guidelines suggest their treatment in the following conditions: VAAs with diameter larger than 2 cm, or 3 times exceeding the target artery; VAAs with a progressive growth of at least 0.5 cm per year; symptomatic or ruptured VAAs. Endovascular treatment, less burdened by morbidity and mortality than surgery, is generally the preferred option. Selection of the best strategy depends on the visceral artery involved, aneurysm characteristics, the clinical scenario and the operator's experience. Tortuosity of VAAs almost always makes embolization the only technically feasible option. The present narrative review reports state of the art and new perspectives on the main endovascular and other interventional options in the treatment of VAAs. Embolization techniques and materials, use of covered and flow-diverting stents and percutaneous approaches are accurately analyzed based on the current literature. Visceral artery-related considerations and targeted approaches are also provided and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: coiling; covered stent; embolization; endovascular treatment; flow-diverting stent; visceral aneurysm
Year: 2021 PMID: 34200171 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10112520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241