Palmaz balloon-expandable stents were placed in 28 hypertensive patients with atherosclerosis involving the ostia of the renal arteries. Stents were placed to treat elastic recoil immediately after conventional angioplasty in 20 patients and restenosis after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in eight patients. Technical success (greater than 30% residual stenosis) was achieved in 27 patients. Complications occurred in five patients. At follow-up (1-25 months), hypertension was cured in three patients and improved in 15 patients, with a cumulative cure or improvement of 64% at 6 months. Of 14 patients with a serum creatinine level of 1.5 mg/dL (132.6 mumol/L) or greater before the placement of stents, five demonstrated improved renal function, five showed stabilization of their condition, and four demonstrated deterioration. Follow-up angiography (2-18 months) was performed in 18 patients. Restenosis was present in seven patients and was accompanied by a relapse of hypertension in only three patients. Of the other four patients with restenosis, two had no initial improvement and two had an initial response without a relapse of hypertension. In this preliminary study, renal stents were beneficial in many patients with poor results from conventional angioplasty for ostial atheroma.
Mesenteric PTA is a valuable treatment option in patients who have CMI and are considered very high operative risks. The initial technical success rate is excellent, with the majority of patients having complete symptomatic improvement and continued relief of symptoms at short-term follow-up.
Transcatheter embolization of symptomatic or large AMLs due to TSC prevents hemorrhage and renal loss. The treatment is minimally invasive, preserves renal function, and can be performed multiple times. All of the patients who underwent followup renal imaging after embolization showed decreased AML size, and none of the 16 patients has developed renal loss or renal insufficiency in these individuals. Embolization should be considered the initial treatment of choice for large or symptomatic AMLs.
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