Balloon-Occluded Antegrade Transvenous Sclerotherapy to Treat Rectal Varices: A Direct Puncture Approach to the Superior Rectal Vein Through the Greater Sciatic Foramen Under CT Fluoroscopy Guidance

Rectal varices occur in 44.5 % of patients with ectopic varices caused by portal hypertension, and 48.6 % of these patients are untreated and followed by observation. However, bleeding occurs in 38 % and shock leading to death in 5 % of such patients. Two patients, an 80-year-old woman undergoing tr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cardiovascular and interventional radiology 2015-10, Vol.38 (5), p.1320-1324
Hauptverfasser: Ono, Yasuyuki, Kariya, Shuji, Nakatani, Miyuki, Yoshida, Rie, Kono, Yumiko, Kan, Naoki, Ueno, Yutaka, Komemushi, Atsushi, Tanigawa, Noboru
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rectal varices occur in 44.5 % of patients with ectopic varices caused by portal hypertension, and 48.6 % of these patients are untreated and followed by observation. However, bleeding occurs in 38 % and shock leading to death in 5 % of such patients. Two patients, an 80-year-old woman undergoing treatment for primary biliary cirrhosis (Child-Pugh class A) and a 63-year-old man with class C hepatic cirrhosis (Child-Pugh class A), in whom balloon-occluded antegrade transvenous sclerotherapy was performed to treat rectal varices are reported. A catheter was inserted by directly puncturing the rectal vein percutaneously through the greater sciatic foramen under computed tomographic fluoroscopy guidance. In both cases, the rectal varices were successfully treated without any significant complications, with no bleeding from rectal varices after embolization.
ISSN:0174-1551
1432-086X
DOI:10.1007/s00270-015-1174-4