Transcatheter injection of absolute ethanol into the renal artery is an effective method of producing renal ablation. There has been no evidence of inadvertent damage to vessels or tissues remote from the target organ. The "postembolization syndrome" of pain, nausea, vomiting, and fever is minimal when compared with other methods of renal artery occlusion. Multiple mechanisms of action of intraarterial ethanol are proposed, including perivascular tissue toxicity, sludging of erythrocytes in small arteries, small artery spasm, and endothelial damage. Experience with this technique in six patients has resulted in specific recommendations regarding the amount and method of injection of ethanol. Angiographic criteria indicating adequate renal ablation are described.
After completion of this article, the reader will be able to list the various ocular changes that occur during pregnancy, summarize the ocular disturbances that occur with preeclampsia and diabetes, and describe the management of some ocular problems during pregnancy.
Meconium peritonitis results from perforation of the gastrointestinal tract during fetal life. Involvement of the tunica vaginalis may be the sole presenting clinical manifestation of the disease in the unusual event of the gut perforation resolving spontaneously. In such instances radiologically detectable calcification in the abdomen and scrotum is an essential diagnostic point. A case is described in which a baby had hydroceles and bilateral intrascrotal nodules but in which calcification was radiologically undetectable, presumably owing to its having undergon resolution. The typical histology of the nodules provided the diagnosis in this otherwise clinically undiagnostic case.
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