Inflammatory cytokines, which overproduced in SAP, can be eliminated effectively from the blood and the ascites by HF+PD treatment.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of endovascular repair for blunt popliteal arterial injuries.Materials and MethodsA retrospective analysis of seven patients with clinical suspicion of popliteal arterial injuries that were confirmed by arteriography was performed from September 2009 to July 2014. Clinical data included demographics, mechanism of injury, type of injury, location of injury, concomitant injuries, time of endovascular procedures, time interval from trauma to blood flow restoration, instrument utilized, and follow-up. All patients were male (mean age of 35.9 ± 10.3 years). The type of lesion involved intimal injury (n = 1), partial transection (n = 2), complete transection (n = 2), arteriovenous fistula (n = 1), and pseudoaneurysm (n = 1). All patients underwent endovascular repair of blunt popliteal arterial injuries.ResultsTechnical success rate was 100%. Intimal injury was treated with a bare-metal stent. Pseudoaneurysm and popliteal artery transections were treated with bare-metal stents. Arteriovenous fistula was treated with bare-metal stent and coils. No perioperative death and procedure-related complication occurred. The average follow-up was 20.9 ± 2.3 months (range 18–24 months). One patient underwent intra-arterial thrombolysis due to stent thrombosis at 18 months after the procedure. All limbs were salvaged. Stent migration, deformation, or fracture was not found during the follow-up.ConclusionEndovascular repair seems to be a viable approach for patients with blunt popliteal arterial injuries, especially on an emergency basis. Endovascular repair may be effective in the short-term. Further studies are required to evaluate the long-term efficacy of endovascular repair.
Venous leg ulcers are a manifestation of lower extremity chronic venous disorder. Venous hypertension caused by abnormal venous blood flow is considered to be the primary mechanism of venous ulcers. The etiology of lower extremity venous ulcer is complicated, and it is difficult to be treated. At present, it has achieved a certain effect for venous leg ulcers through the combination of drugs, pressure therapy, and surgical treatment. Budd-Chiari syndrome is a rare syndrome characterized by portal hypertension and/or inferior vena cava syndrome. Treatment of Budd-Chiari syndrome includes anticoagulation, thrombolysis, angioplasty, stenting, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt, and liver transplantation. This article reports an elderly female patient with recurrent ulceration of both lower extremities that healed poorly after long-term dressing and skin grafting. During further examination, she was found to have Budd-Chiari syndrome. Through multidisciplinary treatment, which includes removing the inferior vena cava stenosis and implanting the ulcer wound, the ulcer wounds then healed.
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