| Literature DB >> 35126897 |
Jinglei Liu1, Dianwei Shi2, Liang Li1, Liming Cao1, Jianyu Liu1, Jingliang He1, Zhihui Liang1.
Abstract
Prostatic hyperplasia can cause dysuria, such as frequent urination, urgency of urination, increased nocturia, poor urination, and other symptoms, which seriously affect the quality of life of old men. We aim to compare and analyze the safety and clinical effect of embolization of the target blood vessels of ruptured prostatic hyperplasia with gelatin sponge particles and embosphere microspheres. Methods. The transcatheter MRI was performed in 422 patients. Among them, 198 patients were treated with gelfoam particles and 224 patients were treated with embosphere microspheres. The clinical effect and adverse reactions were observed and analyzed by biochemical and imaging examination. Four hundred and twenty two cases were hemostasis. In the gelatin sponge group, 34 patients had recurrent bleeding 24-36 hours after embolization, 122 patients had different degrees of elevation of prostatic hyperplasia transaminase (31 cases increased to more than 1000 U/L), 198 patients had different degrees of elevation of bilirubin; in the microsphere group, there was no significant difference in prostatic hyperplasia function indexes between the two groups. Conclusion. Compared with the gelfoam embolic agent, the embosphere embolic microsphere has a good efficacy and safety in the treatment of prostatic hyperplasia rupture and hemorrhage, with a light adverse reaction, a low probability of recanalization, and little damage to the postoperative prostatic hyperplasia function, which is conducive to the benign recovery of perioperative patients and is worthy of clinical application.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35126897 PMCID: PMC8808190 DOI: 10.1155/2022/1424021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Eng ISSN: 2040-2295 Impact factor: 2.682
Figure 1Morphology and features of embosphere microsphere.
Figure 2Characterization of gelatin sponge particles.
Figure 3MRI of massive prostatic hyperplasia in the right lobe with hemorrhage at the lower edge of the mass (arrow).
Figure 4MRI of superselective intubation angiography showing hyperplasia (arrow).
Figure 5Comparison of hemostatic prostatic hyperplasia function in two groups.
Figure 6Comparison of hemostatic prostatic hyperplasia function in two groups: (1) HGB; (2) total bilirubin; (3) albumin.
Figure 7Comparison of blood pressure, prostatic hyperplasia function, and hemoglobin before and after embolization and hemostasis in the microsphere group. (1) ALT (U/L); (2) BP (kPa); (3) AST (U/L); (4) HGB (g/L); (5) protein (g/L) umol/L