The revision of duplex scan-detected vein graft stenosis with surgical or endovascular techniques was associated with an excellent patency rate, including when intervention on alternative vein conduits or treatment of restenosis was necessary. When PTA was selected on the basis of clinical and duplex scan selection criteria, the endovascular treatment of focal vein graft stenosis was effective, durable, and comparable with the surgical revision of more extensive lesions.
We report our single-center experience in treating 101 type II endoleaks with ethylene-vinyl-alcohol copolymer (EVOH, Onyx). In all, 65 endoleaks were embolized transarterially, and 36 were treated through a translumbar approach. Since the first transarterial embolization, when we began attempts to treat all patients initially via common femoral access, 58 (65.9%) of 88 patients were successfully embolized transarterially. All endoleaks in the translumbar group were successfully treated. At a median follow-up length of 15 weeks, a decrease or stabilization in aneurysm size was observed in 39 (73.6%) of the 53 endoleaks that had adequate follow-up computed tomography imaging. The overall residual endoleak rate was 34.0%. There was no difference in efficacy when comparing transarterial and translumbar approaches. We demonstrate that in most cases, transarterial access of the endoleak nidus is feasible, and controlled embolization is possible using EVOH. Furthermore, EVOH appears effective in long-term stabilization of aneurysm size and in preventing residual endoleaks.
Both TIPS and HGPCS reduced portal pressure. Placement of TIPS resulted in more deaths, more rebleeding, and more than twice the treatment failures. Mortality and failure rates promote the application of HGPCS over TIPS.
TIPS and peritoneovenous shunts treat medically intractable ascites. Absence of ascites after either is uncommon. PV shunts control ascites sooner, although TIPS provides better long-term efficacy. After either shunt, numerous interventions are required to assist patency. Assisted shunt patency is better after TIPS. Treating medically refractory ascites with TIPS risks early shunt-related mortality for prospects of longer survival with ascites control. This study promotes the application of TIPS for medically intractable ascites if patients undergoing TIPS have prospects beyond short-term survival.
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