AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic radiation-induced arterial injury can often be predicted based on tumor types and where they are located in the body.
  • The case discussed involves a young patient who developed chronic aortic occlusion after receiving radiation treatment for Ewing sarcoma, leading to severe leg pain and failed endovascular treatment.
  • Successful surgical reconstruction of the aorta was achieved, emphasizing the lasting impacts of radiation on vascular health and the difficulties of surgery in previously irradiated areas.

Article Abstract

Chronic radiation-induced arterial injury is generally predictable by known tumor types and anatomic location. We present the first case of radiation-induced chronic aortic occlusion associated with a small pelvis secondary to the treatment of childhood Ewing sarcoma. The patient presented with profound claudication and accelerated atherosclerosis obliterans of the aortoiliac system and failed endovascular treatment. Successful aortic reconstruction was performed. This case highlights the long-term effects of chemoradiation to the aortoiliac segment and pelvic bones in a child, and the technical challenges of vascular reconstruction in an underdeveloped irradiated pelvis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10788263PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvscit.2023.101380DOI Listing

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