Diagnostic and therapeutic interventional radiologic procedures that provide many treatment options in adults are gaining acceptance in pediatric medicine. Diagnostic (69 patients) and therapeutic (31 patients) interventional experiences in 100 children are summarized, and the procedures of choice for various clinical problems are outlined. Procedures include percutaneous biopsy for benign and malignant diseases, transhepatic cholangiography and biliary drainage, genitourinary procedures (nephrostomy, stent placement, balloon dilation), aspiration of fluid for laboratory analysis, therapeutic drainage of abscesses and noninfected fluid collections, and percutaneous gastrostomy and gastroenterostomy. Diagnoses were accurate in 96% of cases, and therapeutic procedures were successful in 84% of patients, usually obviating operation. Complications occurred in six patients (6%); the most severe was hemoptysis causing respiratory distress. There was no procedure-related mortality. Interventional procedures have wide applications in pediatric patients.
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.
Of 1200 patients referred to the esophageal laboratory at Guy's Hospital for investigation of suspected esophageal motility disorders, 61 (5.1%) were diagnosed as diffuse esophageal spasm. Twenty of these patients whose symptoms were severe did not respond to conservative treatment and were treated by balloon dilatation. Results were good in 14 and poor in six patients, which included one esophageal perforation. Diffuse esophageal spasm was diagnosed where more than 30% nonperistaltic activity was demonstrated by manometry. Lower esophageal sphincter pressure and relaxation were normal in all cases except one. Gastroesophageal reflux was present in four of five poor responders who were examined by 24-h ambulatory pH monitoring, and in only one of 10 good responders. Three of the six patients in whom balloon dilatation was successful proceeded to full-length myotomy, with relief of symptoms in two. The indications for, and results of, balloon dilatation in this condition are discussed, and a new radiological sign is described.
Percutaneous abscess drainage was performed in 21 patients who had periappendiceal abscesses. Fifteen patients had de novo abscesses, while six patients had persistent postsurgical abscesses. Nineteen of the 21 percutaneous drainages were successful. After percutaneous abscess drainage, interval appendectomy was simple and uneventful in all 14 patients in whom it was performed; four patients had appendices removed prior to percutaneous abscess drainage, and three elderly patients have not required appendectomy (follow-up 1 1/2-3 1/2 years). Percutaneous catheter drainage of periappendiceal abscess performed with computed tomographic guidance is effective and safe. Its benefits include imaging demonstration of the abscess; avoidance of an operation for abscess drainage; temporization of extremely ill patients; simplification of appendectomy, which is made elective; obviation of all operations in selected patients (e.g., elderly or with cardiopulmonary disease); and reduction of hospital stay and cost.
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.
In a five year study, 55 patients with radiolucent gall stones were treated with the combination of 7*5 mg chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and 5 0 mg ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA)/kg/daythat is, half the monotherapeutic doses. Side effects were few but four patients could not tolerate the prescribed bile acids because of diarrhoea or nausea. Analysis of fasting duodenal bile confirmed that CDCA+UDCA converted supersaturated into unsaturated bile but the saturation indices did not predict the dissolution response. By actuarial analysis, the confirmed (by ultrasound x 2) complete gail stone dissolution rates in all 55 patients were mean (SEM) 29 (7)% at 12 and 44 (8)% at 24 months. The advent of routine computed tomography before treatment enabled comparison of dissolution efficacy in those screened by computed tomography (n=24), whose maximum gail stone attenuation was <100 Hounsfield units, with that in those ndt screened (n=29). Although stone size and number were comparable, patients screened by computed tomography had significantly better dissolution rates (p<0025) than those not screened in this way. At 12 months, partial or complete gall stone dissolution rates were 93 (7)% in the screened and 55 (11%) in the nonscreened patients. At 18 months, complete dissolution rates were 64 (12%) and 20 (9)% respectively. Computed tomography before treatment is cost effective in selecting those patients likely to achieve gall stone dissolution on treatment with UDCA+CDCA.
Duplex ultrasonography combining high‐resolution imaging and Doppler spectrum analysis was performed in 92 consecutive patients (total, 180 vessels) and compared with the findings of conventional arteriography. All duplex studies were categorized into four groups based upon the maximum internal carotid artery (ICA) velocity: group 1: less than 125 cm/sec; group 2: 125 to 224 cm/sec; group 3: greater than 225 cm/sec; and group 4: no flow. Sensitivities and specificities were highest when peak ICA velocity was used as one of several criteria in quantifying the degree of ICA stenosis. These additional criteria were: (1) the presence of extensive sonographically visible plaque within the ICA; (2) an abnormal spectral waveform with elevated diastolic velocity (greater than 100 cm/sec); (3) resistive pattern ("externalization") of the common carotid artery (CCA) waveform; and (4) the ratio of the right CCA peak velocity to the left of less than 0.7 or greater than 1.3. The overall accuracy for the combined groups using all criteria was 94%.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.