In a retrospective study of proved pseudoaneurysms (PAs) in 15 patients with transplanted organs (11 liver, three kidney, one pancreas), the results of computed tomography (CT), duplex sonography, and angiography were reviewed. Of the 15 cases of PA, eight occurred at the arterial anastomosis and seven were nonanastomotic. Three of the eight anastomotic PAs were caused by infection. Of the seven nonanastomotic PAs, four were caused by percutaneous biopsy, two were caused by infection, and one was of undetermined cause. In nine (60%) of the 15 patients the PAs were incidentally detected at imaging studies performed for other reasons. Diagnosis requires a high degree of suspicion. CT was performed in nine cases and duplex sonography in ten. The diagnosis of PA was made with CT in six (67%) patients and with duplex sonography in five (50%). CT and duplex sonography could not enable diagnosis when the PA was small, when the arterial anastomosis was not included in the field of study, or when enhancement with intravenously administered contract material was suboptimal. Angiography depicted the PAs in all 15 patients. In three liver transplant recipients with gastrointestinal tract bleeding, the causative PAs were detected only with angiography.
The US features, although generally benign, are not specific. Tissue sampling with fine-needle aspiration biopsy is recommended. Core biopsy is necessary if a diagnosis cannot be made with the aspirate but is not performed initially because of the possibility of milk fistula formation.
The authors prospectively evaluated the accuracy of the resistive index (RI) in Doppler ultrasound (US) for the detection of the increased vascular resistance that theoretically occurs with acute liver transplant rejection. RIs were calculated for the proximal hepatic artery and a more distal hepatic artery branch in 67 liver transplant recipients. Biopsies were performed within 24 hours of transplantation, with no intervening therapy. Examination of biopsy specimens by a single pathologist revealed findings of no, minimal, or moderate to severe rejection. RIs in hepatic arteries showed no significant differences among the three pathologic groups. No correlation was found between the RI and improved or worsened rejection in 11 patients who underwent biopsy and US more than once. RIs in hepatic arteries are of no value in the prediction of liver transplant rejection.
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