Ultrasound and computed tomographic images are described in a patient who underwent renal transplantation and presented with hydronephrosis and partial ureteral obstruction secondary to herniation of ...the transplant ureter into a left inguinal hernia. To our knowledge, this is the first report of herniation of a transplanted ureter in the inguinal canal resulting in or exacerbating ureteral obstruction.
Fifteen patients with Crohn disease underwent percutaneous catheter drainage of related abdominal abscesses. The abscesses were located in the right lower quadrant (five patients); in the quadratus ...lumborum and/or iliopsoas muscles (four patients); in the left paracolic gutter (two patients); and in the right gluteal muscles, the liver, the left subphrenic space, and the pelvis (one patient each). All abscesses were evacuated successfully (n = 15 of 15), and no patient required surgery for abscess drainage. Existing fistulas closed in four of seven patients; the other three patients underwent surgery for excision of diseased bowel and enteric fistulas. No patient developed an enterocutaneous fistula as a result of catheter drainage. Percutaneous abscess drainage is effective for abscesses related to Crohn disease and should be regarded as the procedure of choice. An operation for the abscess can be avoided, and early results suggest that bowel surgery may be obviated in selected patients.
Despite the widespread use of interventional radiologic techniques, there has been reluctance to apply these to the spleen. Concern for bleeding and difficulty in negotiating around the colon and ...pleura have limited its use. The authors report their experience with interventional radiology of the spleen in 35 cases, including percutaneous biopsy (n = 5), diagnostic and therapeutic fluid aspiration (n = 14), and catheter drainage of abscesses (n = 9), hematomas (n = 2), intrasplenic pancreatic pseudocysts (n = 2), and necrotic tumor (n = 1). Transsplenic fluid aspiration and biopsy of the pancreas and adrenal gland were performed as well (n = 2). All procedures were performed under computed tomographic or ultrasound guidance. Biopsies were performed with 22- or 20-gauge needles only; no complications were encountered. Diagnoses included primary and secondary malignancies and an infectious process. Drainages were successful in 11 of 14 patients; pleural effusions occurred in two cases, but neither required specific therapy. Interventional radiologic procedures in the spleen are feasible, and the authors discuss methods to promote their safe application.
Percutaneous catheter drainage was performed in 16 patients with diverticulitis complicated by abscesses. Each patient had resolution of fever within 72 hours. Eleven patients subsequently underwent ...simultaneous sigmoid resection and operative anastomosis 10-40 days after percutaneous drainage. One patient required a three-stage procedure after percutaneous drainage, and one patient was too unstable for operation at any time during her course and eventually died of respiratory failure. Three patients did not undergo resection after catheter drainage and have remained asymptomatic for 1-2 1/2 years. Ten of 16 patients had fistulas, eight of which closed spontaneously. Experience with percutaneous drainage of diverticular abscesses suggests that it obviates surgical abscess drainage and permits a single operation (sigmoid resection and closure) to be performed safely. Percutaneous abscess drainage has cost-saving implications, since one or two operations may be avoided in most patients, and in some high-risk elderly patients all operations may be obviated.
Twenty-five patients who had lymphoceles underwent sectional imaging and interventional radiologic procedures. Viewed using sonography, lymphoceles were hypoechoic to anechoic, occasionally with ...internal septa and debris. Low numbers (occasionally negative values) were observed using computed tomography (CT); these numbers strongly suggest the diagnosis of lymphocele. Calcification was observed on CT images of one patient. Diagnostic aspiration revealed tan to yellow fluid containing many lymphocytes; pathognomonic fat globules were observed in four cases. Malignant cells were found in two collections, an unusual occurrence. Therapeutic needle aspiration and short-term catheter drainage were usually unsuccessful (only one of five patients 20% was cured). Long-term (1-5-week) catheter drainage cured 11 of 14 patients (78.6%). Sclerosing agents may have been beneficial for lymphocele obliteration in three of four patients. For most patients, lymphoceles may be diagnosed and treated successfully using radiologic means.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of screening sonography for the detection of clinically significant abdominal injury in pregnant patients with blunt trauma.
We retrospectively ...reviewed the records of 5173 patients with blunt abdominal trauma who underwent screening sonography. Pregnant patients were identified, and the prospective sonographic interpretations were compared with surgical findings, computed tomography (CT), subsequent sonography, cystography, and the clinical course.
Of 1567 female patients with trauma, 947 were of reproductive age and, 102 (11%) of these 947 were pregnant. One patient was excluded because a truth standard was not available. Five (5%) of these 101 patients were found to have injuries at surgery. These injuries involved the placenta (2 injuries), spleen (2 injuries), liver (1 injury), and kidney (1 injury); all required surgery. Initial sonographic findings were positive in 4 of 5 patients with injuries. The missed injury was a placental injury detected 15 hours after screening sonography because of fetal bradycardia. After screening sonography, 6 patients underwent additional abdominal imaging: CT (3 patients), cystography (1 patient), and additional sonography (2 patients). Of 101 patients, 95 (94%) required no additional tests, and 97 (96%) required no test involving ionizing radiation. No pregnant patient underwent diagnostic peritoneal lavage. Sensitivity was 80% (95% confidence interval, 28%-100%), and specificity was 100% (96 of 96; 95% confidence interval, 96%-100%) for detecting major abdominal injury.
Sonography is an effective screening examination that can obviate more hazardous tests such as CT, cystography, and peritoneal lavage in most pregnant patients with trauma requiring objective evaluation of the abdomen.
The authors performed percutaneous drainage of 27 tubo-ovarian abscesses (TOAs) in 16 patients in whom medical therapy with triple antibiotics prior to catheter drainage had not been successful. ...Percutaneous drainage was successful in 15 of 16 patients (94%). One patient underwent total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy 3 days after catheter placement because of persistent symptoms and lack of drainage from the catheter; at laparotomy, a large infected phlegmon was found. Two patients had recurrent disease at 3 and 4 months after catheter placement. Bilateral salpingectomy was performed in one patient and total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in the other. One of these patients had cervical carcinoma, and the other had a long history of recurrent pelvic inflammatory disease and TOAs. The long-term avoidance of surgery was 81.2%. Access routes for catheter drainage were through the anterior abdominal wall for 10 abscesses, through the posterior transgluteal route for 11, and through the transvaginal route for six. Duration of drainage was 1-20 days (mean, 6 days). Complications consisted of transient sciatic pain in two patients and mild bacteremia in one. The results indicate that percutaneous drainage of TOAs is effective in patients in whom medical therapy is not successful.
In many institutions, the standard treatment of symptomatic and large pneumothoraxes has been with surgically placed large-bore (22-32-F) chest tubes. During the past 3-4 years, the authors used ...small catheters (7, 8.2, and 9.4 F) to decompress 30 pneumothoraxes (15 under tension) resulting from percutaneous lung biopsy. The catheters were inserted under computed tomographic or fluoroscopic guidance for the treatment of large (greater than 35%) or symptomatic pneumothoraxes. Twenty-eight of 30 patients were treated successfully with the small catheters alone; two patients underwent surgical placement of 32-F tubes (4 and 12 hours later) because of incomplete resolution of the pneumothoraxes. This series demonstrates that small-caliber catheters effectively decompress pneumothoraxes and that they can be inserted expeditiously by radiologists in the radiology department.
The authors report their experience with 24 patients who underwent a variety of percutaneous procedures involving the gallbladder. Twenty diagnostic and 13 therapeutic procedures were performed under ...sonographic, computed tomographic (CT), or fluoroscopic guidance; these procedures included biopsy of the gallbladder, diagnostic cholecystography, diagnostic aspiration of bile, gallstone dissolution and removal, cholecystostomy for drainage, and gallbladder abscess drainage. The indications for percutaneous cholecystostomy (performed in 11 patients) included relief of hydrops and empyema, gallstone dissolution, mechanical gallstone removal, and drainage for malignant obstruction. Each procedure was successful. There was one complicating episode of cholecystitis and four previously described episodes of vagal hypotension. Bile peritonitis did not occur in any of the patients. The authors discuss the various percutaneous gallbladder procedures and specific technical considerations in performing them.
Seven pregnant women with symptomatic hydronephrosis had sonographically guided percutaneous nephrostomy for pyosepsis (five patients) or for pain with azotemia (two patients with renal transplants). ...Antibiotics had been ineffective in controlling pyosepsis in each patient; retrograde ureteral catheterization via cystoscopy was unsuccessful in one patient. After percutaneous nephrostomy, prompt clinical improvement was observed in all patients (i.e., sepsis was relieved and pain abated). Labor was not induced in any of the patients, and no adverse effects occurred to any fetus or mother. Eleven (eight percutaneous nephrostomy, three catheter exchanges) of the 12 procedures were done without conventional radiography and with sonographic guidance alone. After percutaneous nephrostomy, maneuvers to obtain a diagnosis and to treat the obstruction (if necessary) were delayed until after delivery. The causes of ureteral obstruction were calculi (four patients) and a gravid uterus (three patients). After delivery, stones were removed either percutaneously (one patient) or cystoscopically (two patients) or passed spontaneously (one patient); resolution of obstruction by the gravid uterus was proved by Whitaker test after delivery. Sonographically guided percutaneous nephrostomy is an effective and safe method to treat pregnant women who have symptomatic obstructive hydronephrosis associated with either pyosepsis or azotemia. The procedure is rapid, requires minimal anesthesia, has no radiation, and is safe for the fetus. The technique is a useful and perhaps preferable alternative to more invasive surgical therapy or retrograde stenting.