Percutaneous aspiration thromboembolectomy (PAT) was used as an angioplastic tool to remove from arteries of the lower limbs thromboembolitic material originating from any source. PAT was performed with a custom-designed catheter/sheath system, alone or in combination with balloon dilatation and/or local lytic infusion therapy with streptokinase or urokinase. PAT completed the restoration of blood flow, thus improving the results of the preceding angioplastic interventions. Clinical improvement was high, with 93% success (42 of 45 procedures). Only one below-the-knee amputation occurred, and could not be prevented. No patient became worse because of PAT intervention. The Fogarty catheter technique remains the method of choice for removing emboli within the aorto-iliac region, but in the smaller vessels below the inguinal ligament-especially in the distal superficial femoral, popliteal, and tibial regions--in our experience PAT is superior. This has been substantiated also in studies of laboratory animals, using barium-impregnated emboli.
A 26-year-old man with post-traumatic priapism was treated successfully by occlusion of the left internal pudendal artery with an autologous clot. The recovery was marked by the return of entirely normal sexual function. This excellent result suggests that autologous clot injection of the internal pudental artery should be considered as an appropriate form of therapy for the treatment of selected patients with priapism.
We have performed 84 balloon dilatations in 40 patients who had esophageal strictures. Of these patients, 31 who had benign diseases improved, and the procedure proved to be safe, reliable, and easy to perform; in 77% of these patients, only one or two dilatations were necessary. In 10 patients who had previously undergone treatment with bougienage, the symptom-free interval of 9.3 months following balloon dilatation is four times longer than that experienced following bougienage. In patients who have malignant disease, though the symptom-free intervals are short, the procedure can be repeated easily and is accepted well by patients so that palliation can be achieved. Since only readily controlled transverse forces act in the balloon therapy, rupture is virtually eliminated, while the use of a flexible angiographic guidewire to traverse the strictures practically excludes perforation. Balloon dilatation offers distinct advantages compared with bougienage for the treatment of esophageal strictures.
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