Purpose: To describe the interventional management and clinical outcome of pancreatico-duodenal arterio-venous malformations (PDAVMs).

Material And Methods: Seven patients presenting a PDAVM (6 women, 1 male; mean age: 61) were retrospectively reviewed. Technical, clinical success and complications of embolization and surgical management of symptomatic PDAVMs were assessed. Technical success was defined as a complete occlusion of the PDAVM and clinical success as no clinical symptom or recurrence during follow-up. Patients with asymptomatic PDAVMs were followed clinically, by Doppler ultrasound and CT-angiography.

Results: Mean follow-up time was 69 months (15-180). Five symptomatic patients presented with upper gastrointestinal bleeding (n=3), ascites (n=1), and abdominal pain (n=1). Two patients were asymptomatic. The PDAVMs were classified as follow: Yakes I (1), IIIa (2), IIIb (3) and IV (1). Five symptomatic patients were treated with 9 embolization sessions with arterial approach (onyx®, glue, coils) in 7 and venous approach in 2 (plugs, coils, covered stents, STS foam and onyx®). Technical success of embolization was 60% (3/5). Devascularization was incomplete for 2 Yakes IIIB patients. Clinical success of embolization was estimated at 80% (4/5) as one patient required additional surgery (Whipple) because of persistent bleeding. One splenic vein thrombosis was treated successfully by mechanical thrombectomy and heparin. No recurrence occurred during follow-up. No progression was documented in asymptomatic patients.

Conclusion: Embolization of symptomatic PDAVMs is effective and surgery should be performed in second intention. Complete devascularization is more difficult to obtain in Yakes III PDAVM.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8724485PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s42155-021-00269-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

clinical success
12
pancreatico-duodenal arterio-venous
8
symptomatic pdavms
8
patients asymptomatic
8
asymptomatic pdavms
8
symptomatic patients
8
success embolization
8
patients
6
clinical
5
success
5

Similar Publications

Practical Steps Supporting Professional Publications for Leadership and Teams.

J Nurs Adm

December 2024

Author Affiliations: Senior Operations Leader, Analytics and Nurse Scientist (Dr Kim), Kaiser Permanente National Patient Care Services, Oakland; Assistant Clinical Professor (Dr Kim), Community Health Systems, University of California, San Francisco School of Nursing, San Francisco; Professor Emeritus (Dr Latham), California State University, Fullerton, School of Nursing, Fullerton; Education Program Coordinator (Dr Krom), Assistant Professor of Medicine (Dr Krom), Cedars-Sinai Marina Del Ray Hospital, Marina Del Ray; Director (Dr Failla), Nursing Workforce Transitions, Caster Nursing Institute, Sharp HealthCare, San Diego; Regional Director and Nurse Scientist (Dr Kawar), Nursing Research and EBP Program, Kaiser Permanente Southern California and Hawaii Patient Care Services, Pasadena.

Disseminating research or evidence-based practice is not straightforward. As more clinical nurses, executive nurse leaders, nurse scientists, and faculty contribute to new knowledge, there is an increasing need to support the processes to publish and disseminate manuscripts to advance healthcare. Nurse administrators and leaders are key influencers and supporters to bolster expertise and resources to publish.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: This study introduces Smart Imitator (SI), a 2-phase reinforcement learning (RL) solution enhancing personalized treatment policies in healthcare, addressing challenges from imperfect clinician data and complex environments.

Materials And Methods: Smart Imitator's first phase uses adversarial cooperative imitation learning with a novel sample selection schema to categorize clinician policies from optimal to nonoptimal. The second phase creates a parameterized reward function to guide the learning of superior treatment policies through RL.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The physician-scientist workforce is shrinking in the United States. Academic otologists/neurotologists face a diverse set of barriers to successful careers. We aimed to characterize the factors affecting contemporary otology/neurotology surgeon-scientists.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The "" under this Perspective underline the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and partnerships across several disciplines, such as medical science and technology, medicine, bioengineering, and computational approaches, in bridging the gap between research, manufacturing, and clinical applications. Effective communication is key to bridging team gaps, enhancing trust, and resolving conflicts, thereby fostering teamwork and individual growth toward shared goals. Drawing from the success of the COVID-19 vaccine development, we advocate the application of similar collaborative models in other complex health areas such as nanomedicine and biomedical engineering.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The antigen Na-GST-1, expressed by the hookworm Necator americanus, plays crucial biochemical roles in parasite survival. This study explores the development of mRNA vaccine candidates based on Na-GST-1, building on the success of recombinant Na-GST-1 (rNa-GST-1) protein, currently assessed as a subunit vaccine candidate, which has shown promise in preclinical and clinical studies.

Methodology/findings: By leveraging the flexible design of RNA vaccines and protein intracellular trafficking signal sequences, we developed three variants of Na-GST-1 as native (cytosolic), secretory, and plasma membrane-anchored (PM) antigens.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!