| Literature DB >> 34978632 |
Clement Marcelin1, Auh Whan Park2, Patrick Gilbert1, Louis Bouchard1, Eric Therasse1, Pierre Perreault1, Marie France Giroux1, Gilles Soulez3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe the interventional management and clinical outcome of pancreatico-duodenal arterio-venous malformations (PDAVMs).Entities:
Keywords: AVM; Embolization; Pancreas; Percutaneous
Year: 2022 PMID: 34978632 PMCID: PMC8724485 DOI: 10.1186/s42155-021-00269-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CVIR Endovasc ISSN: 2520-8934
Fig. 1A 79 yo women with upper GI bleeding. A- Arteriography showed a type IIIa pancreatic AVM, vascularized by the gastro-duodenal artery (black arrow), connected to the gastro-duodenal vein (double arrow) with a nidus (arrowhead), draining into the portal vein (dotted arrow). B- After embolization of the gastroduodenal artery with coils (black arrow) and the nidus with onyx (large black arrow), opacification of the celiac trunk showed no residual vascularization of the AVM.
Fig. 2A 57 yo women with upper GI bleeding. A- CT scan showed a nidus in the pancreatic head (dotted arrow). B- Selective angiography of the pancreatic dorsal artery (black arrow) showing a type IIIB pancreatic AVM, with multiple feeding arteries draining in an aneurysmal vein (white arrow) both draining into the portal vein. C- Selective angiography of the gastroduodenal artery showing multiple arterial collaterals (black arrow), vascularized by multiples branches of the postero-superior and antero-superior pancreatico-duodenal arteries (white arrow). Embolization with Onyx® of the dorsal pancreatic artery (large black arrow). D- Portal venous access showed an enlarged pancreatic vein (black arrow) draining into the portal vein (big black arrow). E- Pressure cooker technique: proximal embolization of the draining gastroduodenal vein using a plug (white arrow), and then distal embolization with STS using a microcatheter distal to the Plug in order to reflux into the nidus (black arrow) of the AVM. F- Selective angiography of the celiac trunk showing a residual pancreatic AVM (arrow).
Fig. 3A 66 yo women with a cryptogenic cirrhosis who underwent previous abdominal surgery for colorectal carcinoma and chronic portal vein thrombosis presented recurrent ascites and chronic pancreatitis. A CT scans showing a Yakes type IIIa pancreatic AVM (arrow), with an aneurysmal splenic vein (dashed arrow). B Selective angiography of the splenic artery showed a pancreatic AVM, vascularized by the dorsal pancreatic artery (arrow), splenic artery, left gastric artery, and connected to an aneurysmal splenic vein (dashed arrow). C After puncture of splenic vein, venography showing the aneurysmal splenic vein draining into the gastroduodenal and mesenteric veins because of the preexisting portal thrombosis (dashed arrow). D Insertion of a covered stent in the splenic vein (dashed arrow) by a transplenic access and embolization using Onyx® and coils after direct puncture of the aneurysm. The patient had subsequent splenic venous thrombosis which was successfully treated by mechanical thrombectomy and heparin infusion. E Doppler ultrasound at 1 year showed permeability of the splenic and portal veins (dashed arrow), with no residual AVM.
Fig. 4Yakes AVM classification (Soulez et al., 2019)
Patients characteristics
| Patient characteristics | Mean (range) or N (%) |
|---|---|
| Average age in years (range) | 61.1 (range 43-79) |
| Gender | |
| -Male | 1 |
| -Female | 6 |
| History of abdominal surgery, portal vein thrombosis, cirrhosis or pancreatitis | 1 |
| Symptoms | |
| -hemorrhage | 5 |
| -ascites | 1 |
| -abdominal pain | 1 |
| -none | 2 |
| Classification Yakes | |
| -I | 1 |
| -IIa | - |
| -IIb | - |
| -IIIa | 2 |
| -IIIb | 3 |
| -IV | 1 |
| Localization | |
| -head | 3 |
| -isthmus + head | 2 |
| -head+isthmus+body | 1 |
| -body + isthmus | 1 |
| Mean size of the nidus (mm) | 24.5 (range 20-30) |
| Treatment | |
| -none | 2 |
| -embolization | 5 |
| -surgery | 1 |