21 research outputs found

    Angiografia

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    Reconstructive surgery of the abdominal aorta in a case of left-positioned inferior vena cava : clinical case and review of the literature

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    An unsuspected left-sided inferior vena cava (IVC) can present a formidable challenge for the surgeon attempting abdominal aortic surgery. The incidence of congenital anomalies of the post-renal (infrarenal) vena cava is approximately 3%, with double inferior vena cava most frequently occurring. The authors refer to a case of isolated left-sided vena cava in a 53 year old man who underwent an aorto-femoral bypass graft for aorto-iliac occlusive disease. On the basis of a literature review the authors recall the incidence and the embryology of this anomaly, and analyze its surgical implications, with particular reference to abdominal aortic surgery

    Interventional radiology in the treatment of urological vascular complications

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    Urological vascular complications (UVC) are largely secondary to percutaneous procedures that are nowadays extensevely used by the urologists and the nephrologists. The major frequency of UVC is observed after the renal biopsy, in a percentage varying from 7 to 17% in different series; UVC are less frequent after a nephrostomic procedure (near 1-3%). UVC consist of artero-venous fistulas (AVF) and pseudoaneurysms (PA), that generally cause haemorrhage, particularly macroscopic hematuria. In the vast majority of cases hematuria resolves spontaneously or with conservative therapy but, in the 4 to 9% of patients persists and requires an adequate therapy, often in emergency. Interventional radiology permits an effective and timely treatment of the lesions, using the techniques of transcatheter embolization that are greatly improved in the last 20 years and that present rate of technical success greater than 80%. Moreover radiological embolization shows a low incidence of complications and lower hospitalization cost with respect to surgical treatment. Herein we describe the different techniques of embolization, the indications and the results as appears from the literature and the personal experience. The latter is based on a series of 31 procedures performed in 26 patients, with a rate of technical and clinical success of 93.5%

    Interventional radiology in the treatment of renal artery stenosis

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    Percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) alone or in combination with stent implantation, is increasingly used as an alternative technique to surgical revascularization for treatment of renal artery stenosis (RAS) wich may cause hypertension or jeopardize renal function. Herein we report the results obtained with 305 PTRAs performed in 242 hypertensive patients, 144 of whom had atherosclerotic RAS, 69 fibromuscolar dysplasia, 15 Ras in transplanted kidneys, 6 restenosis in surgically revascularized kidneys, 4 Takayasu arteritis and 4 neurofibromatosis. Stents were implanted in 68 cases, mostly in atherosclerotic stenoses. The technical success was achieved in 261 arteries (85.6%), with 33 failures (10.8%) and 11 (3.6%) procedures not completed for anatomical reasons. PTRA related complications were observed in 23 cases (7.5%), but no fatalities occurred. An overall benefit on blood pressure control was observed in 41% of patients with atherosclerotic RAS and in 68% of those with fibromuscolar dysplasia. It appears that independently from the ethiology PTRA is technically effective in correcting RAS; yet the position of PTRA with respect to that of medical or surgical treatment needs to be better delineated through randomized, controlled studies aimed at comparing the clinical efficacies of these different approaches

    Renovascular disease and hypertension in children with neurofibromatosis

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    Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is associated with vascular lesions, such as renal artery stenosis, and secondary hypertension. The real prevalence is largely unknown, particularly in children. We observed 27 patients with NF1, mean age 12.8 years (range 4.2-24 years), for 2-10 years to assess the association of NF1 with vascular abnormalities and secondary hypertension. Patients were studied with angiography, 24-h blood pressure monitoring, a captopril test, and Doppler ultrasonography of aorta and renal arteries. The prevalence of hypertension was 18.5%; 61.5% of patients studied with angiography had vascular lesions, half of whom were apparently normotensive. However, they had abnormal 24-h blood pressure monitoring, which was a first sign of poor blood pressure control. Those patients with severe hypertension (11.1%) were successfully treated with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA); stenosis recurred in 2 of 3 patients after a 2-year follow-up period, and was responsive to drugs. We conclude that hypertension is a frequent complication of NF1 in pediatric patients, it is usually secondary to typical vascular lesions, and requires careful follow-up. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (24-h) is a sensitive method for detecting initial alterations of the blood pressure pattern. PTA may be an effective treatment in this conditio
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