RESUMEN
In this case report, a 58-year-old male with comorbidities of BMI 41 kg/m2, hypertension and diabetes type 2 underwent radical cystectomy. The operation was performed in 30-degree Trendelenburg and lasted > 7 hours with a total blood loss of 850 ml. The patient presented with painless bilateral vision loss upon awakening. MRI, CT and CT angiography of the cerebrum was performed and revealed arteriosclerosis and hypophysis adenoma. Neurological and ophthalmic consults were performed. Three weeks post-operatively, bilateral papillary atrophy was present, and posterior ischaemic optic neuropathy was confirmed.
Asunto(s)
Ginecomastia , Neuropatía Óptica Isquémica , Masculino , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Ginecomastia/diagnóstico , Cistectomía/efectos adversos , Neuropatía Óptica Isquémica/complicaciones , Mama , Mamografía/efectos adversosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Renal angiomyolipoma is rare, but many of these patients may have an acute debut with severe bleeding. These patients need urgent treatment with interventional embolization as an attractive option. PURPOSE: To investigate the technical and clinical effect of this treatment and to evaluate long-term clinical outcomes with clinical control and radiological imaging. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Eight patients with angiomyolipoma were treated with embolization. Five patients were treated acutely. Five patients were followed-up for mean 4.5 years with clinical and radiological examinations. RESULTS: The renal angiomyolipoma decreased significantly from mean 7.2 cm to 2.9 cm after embolization (p = 0.04). Cortical infarctions of about one-third of the circumference of the embolized kidneys could be detected on follow-up examinations, but all patients had normal total kidney function. The bleeding was primarily stopped in all patients, however, in one patient bleeding from a lumbar artery was supplementary embolized within 24 h. In another case the interventional procedure ended up in embolization of the whole kidney as it was impossible to embolize all the feeding arteries selectively. One patient had a nephrectomy one month after embolization because of infection and re-bleeding and one patient after 2.5 years because of tumor size >4 cm. The technical success was 7/8 (88%) and clinical success was 6/8 patients (75%). CONCLUSION: Selective embolization of renal angiomyolipoma is a minimally invasive and safe procedure with few complications. It is a nephron sparing alternative to renal resection. The reduction in tumor size after embolization is significant and long-lasting.
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INTRODUCTION: The objective of this study was to present patients who underwent either elective or acute renal embolisation in a single centre where embolisation was available at all hours. METHODS: The records of all patients who underwent transcatheter arterial embolisation (TAE) at Odense University Hospital from October 2010 to July 2013 were extracted retrospectively and examined to determine the indication for treatment, procedural details and complications. Patients were divided into four groups: renal cancer, trauma, angiomyolipoma (AML) and others. When there was indication for embolisation, a renal angiography was performed and followed by embolisation, if possible. The procedure was performed in local analgesia via the common femoral artery and as a super-selective procedure to save as many viable nephrons as possible. The most commonly used embolisation materials were coils. RESULTS: In total, 35 patients were included; their mean age was 64 years (range: 17-95 years): eight females and 27 males. A total of 15 patients underwent embolisation due to renal cancer; nine elective and six acute procedures. Seven traumas were embolised. Five AML patients underwent embolisation of which three were treated acutely. Finally, eight patients were treated because of spontaneous bleeding, arteriovenous malformation or aneurisms; three elective, five acute. The post-embolisation syndrome occurred in 22 patients (63%) and six patients (17%) were re-embolised. One patient had persistent infection (3%). Post-embolisation nephrectomy was performed in four patients (11%). CONCLUSION: The most common reason for TAE was renal cancer. TAE is a safe modality with few complications both when performed acutely and electively. FUNDING: not relevant. TRIAL REGISTRATION: not relevant.