non-vascular interventions Flashcards
1
Q
basic techniques (to enter the body)
A
- Seldinger
- Trockar
- Biopsy
2
Q
biopsy
A
Percutaneous sampling
- cells/cytology: FNAB/21-23G needles, Smear, search for malignancy
- Tissue/core: 24-20G needle, in diffuse or localised pathologies, more complications
3
Q
percutaneous ablative techniques
A
- chemical: ethanol/PEI
- Thermoablation: cryo, laser, focused US, RFA -> liver, kidney, lung, breast, bone
- percutaneous, laparoscopic, open surgical -> combined
4
Q
major complications in HCC biopsy / intervention
A
- intraperitoneal hemorrhage
- intrahepatic hematoma
- seeding
- abscess
- hemothorax
- diaphragmatic paresis
- biloma
- PTX
- portal HTN
- stenosis of common hepatic duct
- venous thrombosis
- multisegmental hepatic infarction
- acute cholecystitis
- septicema
5
Q
minor complications in HCC biopsy / intervention
A
- skin burn
- asymptomatic thickening of gallbladder wall
- self-limiting intraperitoneal bleeding
- artero-portal shunt
- thickening of diaphragm
- subcapsular hematoma
- biloma
- intratumoral hematoma
- pain
6
Q
renal CC ablation
A
- best indication for RF
- never seen recurrence in treated area
- low complications
- outpatient
7
Q
RF ablation of RCC - indications
A
1) initial:
- co-morbidities, poor surgical candidate
- life expectancy less that 10 years
- ± solitary kidney
- no evidence of metastatic disease
2) expanded:
- palliation of large central tumors while maintaining renal function
- hematuria control
8
Q
RF ablation of renal tumors - tumor factors
A
- tumor size:
3 cm or less is ideal (100% surgical success, > 90% single session).
3-5.5 cm can be done with more ablations; more sessions. 100% success if exophytic. 70% with single session.
9
Q
aspirate evaluation
A
- bacteriogram: pus
- leukocytes, no germs: “sterile abscess”
- creatinine: urinoma
- lymphocytes, fat: lymphocele
- bilirubin: bilioma
- amylase: pancreatic pseudocyst
10
Q
sclerotherapy
A
- cysts, lymphocele, seroma
- percutaneous puncture or drainage
- the amount of agent depends on the volume of fluid in the collection
- alcohol
- betadine/braunol
- 20-30 min to be effective
- aspiration of the sclerotizing fluid
- repeat!
11
Q
biliary obstructions
A
- can be caused by: stones, stenosis, compression (benign, malignant)
- therapeutic choices: surgical, endoscopic, percutaneous (PTD: percutaneous transhepatic drainage, PTC ~ cholangiography)
12
Q
uroradiology, endourology - applications
A
- urine deviation
- stone extraction
- dilatation
- ureteroplasty
- stenting
- urology/radiology: retrograde or anterograde
13
Q
special interventions
A
- TIPS
- shunt pta
- PVE
- islet cell tx
- hepatocyta tx
- GI-stents
14
Q
GI-stents
A
- in GI occlusion
- when surgery cannot be performed
- palliative stent placement
- OTW or endoscopic route