51 resultados para EMBOLISATION
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OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the short- and medium-term results of prostatic arterial embolisation (PAE) for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). METHODS: This was a prospective non-randomised study including 255 patients diagnosed with BPH and moderate to severe lower urinary tract symptoms after failure of medical treatment for at least 6 months. The patients underwent PAE between March 2009 and April 2012. Technical success is when selective prostatic arterial embolisation is completed in at least one pelvic side. Clinical success was defined as improving symptoms and quality of life. Evaluation was performed before PAE and at 1, 3, 6 and every 6 months thereafter with the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS), quality of life (QoL), International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF), uroflowmetry, prostatic specific antigen (PSA) and volume. Non-spherical polyvinyl alcohol particles were used. RESULTS: PAE was technically successful in 250 patients (97.9 %). Mean follow-up, in 238 patients, was 10 months (range 1-36). Cumulative rates of clinical success were 81.9 %, 80.7 %, 77.9 %, 75.2 %, 72.0 %, 72.0 %, 72.0 % and 72.0 % at 1, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 and 36 months, respectively. There was one major complication. CONCLUSIONS: PAE is a procedure with good results for BPH patients with moderate to severe LUTS after failure of medical therapy. KEY POINTS: • Prostatic artery embolisation offers minimally invasive therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia. • Prostatic artery embolisation is a challenging procedure because of vascular anatomical variations. • PAE is a promising new technique that has shown good results.
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Objectifs: Etudier les résultats techniques et cliniques de l'embolisation des hématomes musculaires spontanés de l'abdomen . Caractériser les hématomes ayant étéembolisés au CT et définir les éventuels critères cliniques et anatomiques pour une embolisation . Etudier la relation entre les hématomes embolisés et lesanticoagulants.Matériels et méthodes: Etude rétrospective des patients ayant bénéficié d'une embolisation pour un hématome musculaire abdominopelvien spontané entre 2005 et 2010. Sont analysésles données cliniques (anticaogulants, retentissement hémodynamqiue), les données scanographiques (site, volume, saignement actif), les artères embolisées etle type d'embol, le résultat clinique immédiat, les complications et la mortalité en cours d'hospitalisation .Résultats: 28 patients (âge moyen 75 ans) ont été embolisés. Tous les patients avaient un traitement anticoagulant et/ou antiplaquettaire. La majorité des hématomesembolisés concernaient le muscle grand droit de l'abdomen. Le saignement actif n'était pas identifié chez tous les patients au CT. Pas de complication immédiaterapportée. Le succès technique était de 98%. Pas de récidive précoce rapportée y compris après réintroduction du traitement anticaogulant.Conclusion: L'embolisation hémostatique des hématomes musculaires spontanés sous anticoagulants est efficace pour contrôler le saignement et permettre la réintroductiondu traitement anticoagulant.
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Objectifs L'embolisation de l'artère splénique (EAS) proximale serait mieux tolérée que la distale ou segmentaire, les mêmes objectifs cliniques étant remplis. Notre hypothèse est que l'EAS proximale aurait un taux de complications inférieur notamment concernant les infections et infarcissements. Matériels et méthodes Soixante-treize patients ont bénéficié d'une EAS proximale vs. distale ou segmentaire dans un centre universitaire sur une période de 5 ans. Les données cliniques et l'imagerie préinterventionnelle ont été revues avec détermination du grade de la lésion traumatique splénique et de la quantité d'hémopéritoine. Les complications dues à l'intervention, 0 = pas de complications à 3 = complications importantes, ont été identifiées par le suivi postinterventionnel. Résultats Les complications dues à l'EAS proximale (N=11, médian = 1,0, range = 0-2, moyenne = 0,64) ne différaient pas de manière significative par rapport à celles de l'EAS distale (N=62, médian = 1,0, range = 0-3, moyenne = 0,87), U=303,0, Z = − 0,63, p = 0,30, r = − 0,07. Conclusion L'EAS proximale est une intervention sûre et efficace. Elle démontre de façon non-significative moins de complications postinterventionnelles et en particulier pas de splénectomie secondaire supplémentaire par rapport à l'EAS distale. Ces résultats nous encouragent à poursuivre une étude prospective qui pourrait révéler un avantage significatif de l'EAS proximale.
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BACKGROUND: The aim of this communication is to describe an unusual and serious complication of retrobulbar anaesthesia for cataract surgery. HISTORY AND SIGNS: A 78-year-old female was referred for visual loss (light perception) 24 hours after apparently uneventful cataract surgery with retrobulbar anaesthesia in her left eye. Fundus examination revealed multiple arterial emboli and a localised retinal detachment. MRI revealed a retrobulbar hypersignal of the optic nerve associated with perineuritis. The cardiovascular examination was normal. We assumed this condition resulted from injection of the anaesthetic mixture into the optic nerve. THERAPY AND OUTCOME: In order to improve retinal circulation and oxygenation, the intraocular pressure was maximally lowered and anticalcic therapy administered, expecting optimal arterial dilatation. Methylprednisolone (1 g/day 3 days i. v., then rapidly tapered) was also added. The retina slowly reattached but visual acuity remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Retrobulbar anaesthesia is routinely used for ocular surgery. Serious complications may still happen, however. This case adds to the previously reported spectrum of complications from retrobulbar anaesthesia.
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Acute pancreatitis can complicate non-selective transcatheter arterial embolization of hepatocellular carcinoma with an incidence ranging from 1,7% (acute clinical pancreatitis) to 40% (biological pancreatitis). This complication is thought to be related to embolization of extrahepatic arterial collaterals.We report herein a case of acute clinical pancreatitis developing within 24 hours after a second course of selective transcatheter arterial chemo-embolization into the proper hepatic artery. Neither anatomical arterial variation nor particular risk factor for acute pancreatitis could be identified. This complication is unusual after selective arterial embolization. Because it may clinically mimick a postembolization syndrome, dosage of serum pancreatic enzymes should be performed systematically in case of abdominal pain following chemoembolization.
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Objectives The administration of unfractionated heparin (UFH) prior to carotid clamping during carotid endarterectomy (CEA) transiently increases the platelet aggregation response to arachidonic acid (AA) despite the use of aspirin. We hypothesized that this phenomenon might be reduced by using low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) resulting in fewer emboli in the early post-operative period. Methods 183 aspirinated patients undergoing CEA were randomised to 5000 IU UFH (n = 91) or 2500 IU LMWH (dalteparin, n = 92) prior to carotid clamping. End-points were: transcranial Doppler (TCD) measurement of embolisation, effect on bleeding and platelet aggregation to AA and adenosine 5′-diphosphate (ADP). Results Patients randomised to UFH had twice the odds of experiencing a higher number of emboli in the first 3 h after CEA, than those randomised to LMWH (p = 0.04). This was not associated with increased bleeding (mean time from flow restoration to operation end: 23 min (UFH) vs. 24 min (LMWH), p = 0.18). Platelet aggregation to AA increased significantly following heparinisation, but was unaffected by heparin type (p = 0.90). The platelets of patients randomised to LMWH exhibited significantly lower aggregation to ADP compared to UFH (p < 0.0001). Conclusions Intravenous LMWH is associated with a significant reduction in post-operative embolisation without increased bleeding. The higher rate of embolisation seen with UFH may be mediated by increased platelet aggregation to ADP, rather than to AA.
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Introduction: The incidence of vertebral artery (VA) injury during cervical spine surgery is rare. Even though tamponade is effective in many cases, early consultation of an endovascular team is recommended if bleeding cannot be controlled. We report a case of emergent endovascular embolisation of left VA due to iatrogenic injury during anterior cervical disc removal and fusion. Case: A 47-year-old woman was admitted to our emergency department with serious arterial bleeding from the neck only hours after undergoing anterior cervical disc removal and fusion surgery. She was intubated and mechanically ventilated, however hemorrhage could not be successfully controlled by packing with surgical hemostatic agents. Cranial computed tomography, computed tomography of the cervical spine and CT angiography confirmed the suspected diagnosis of injury to the VA. Emergent endovascular embolisation successfully stopped the bleeding. Occlusion of the vessel was achieved by vascular plugging. The patient was discharged from our hospital 14 days after the intervention, receiving a revision surgery of the cervical spine on the day of embolisation. At the date of discharge she presented without any focal neurological deficit. Conclusion: Pre-operative radiographic imaging of the cervical spine should be used routinely to identify anatomic abnormalities of the vertebral arteries. Endovascular embolisation appears to be effective in treating acute iatrogenic dissection of the vertebral arteries.
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Abstract Objectives to evaluate risk factors for recurrence of carcinoma of the uterine cervix among women who had undergone radical hysterectomy without pelvic lymph node metastasis, while taking into consideration not only the classical histopathological factors but also sociodemographic, clinical and treatment-related factors. Study desin This was an exploratory analysis on 233 women with carcinoma of the uterine cervix (stages IB and IIA) who were treated by means of radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy, with free surgical margins and without lymph node metastases on conventional histopathological examination. Women with histologically normal lymph nodes but with micrometastases in the immunohistochemical analysis (AE1/AE3) were excluded. Disease-free survival for sociodemographic, clinical and histopathological variables was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to identify the independent risk factors for recurrence. Twenty-seven recurrences were recorded (11.6%), of which 18 were pelvic, four were distant, four were pelvic + distant and one was of unknown location. The five-year disease-free survival rate among the study population was 88.4%. The independent risk factors for recurrence in the multivariate analysis were: postmenopausal status (HR 14.1; 95% CI: 3.7-53.6; P < 0.001), absence of or slight inflammatory reaction (HR 7.9; 95% CI: 1.7-36.5; P = 0.008) and invasion of the deepest third of the cervix (HR 6.1; 95% CI: 1.3-29.1; P = 0.021). Postoperative radiotherapy was identified as a protective factor against recurrence (HR 0.02; 95% CI: 0.001-0.25; P = 0.003). (To continue) Postmenopausal status is a possible independent risk factor for recurrence even when adjusted for classical prognostic factors (such as tumour size, depth of tumour invasion, capillary embolisation) and treatment-related factors (period of treatment and postoperative radiotherapy status)
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Dissertação de Mestrado, Engenharia Zootécnica, 14 de Maio de 2015, Universidade dos Açores.