OBJECTIVE. Percutaneous treatment of hydatid cysts is relatively new, and the data related to it are limited.The purpose of this study was to provide additional data to strengthen the proof of its effectiveness.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS.One hundred sixty-eight hepatic cysts in I 1 1 patients were treated using a percutaneous approach under sonographic and fluoroscopic guidance.Cysts smaller than 5 cm in diameter were treated with a one-stage procedure that consisted of puncture of the cyst, aspiration of fluid, and injection and reaspiration of hypertonic saline solution. Larger cysts were treated with a two-stage procedure that consisted of the one-stage procedure followed by catheterization and sclerotherapy with alcohol.
Percutaneous treatment of giant hydatid cysts is effective because it eliminates both the mass effect and the parasite and alleviates the symptoms. Although the long catheterization time associated with the procedure is unfavorable, it is tolerated by the patients.
Although the most involved organs are liver and lung, hydatid cysts occur in adrenal glands, rarely, and constitute only 0.5% of hydatid cysts. Herein, we demonstrate and discuss, for the first time in the literature to the best of our knowledge, the radiological features of adrenal hydatid disease and evaluate the long-term results (57 months of follow-up) of the percutaneous treatment of hydatid cyst in the adrenal gland in a patient.
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