Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant

Introduction: The coeliac axis and its major branches are known to have various anatomical variations, some are more common than others. The presence of variants may complicate the upper abdominal procedures, such as open surgery or interventional radiology procedures. Result: This is a case of a 6...

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Main Authors: Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi, Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali, Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah, Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev, Ahmad, Nur Fathihah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lönge Medikal Sdn Bhd. 2022
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/7/105666_Aberration%20in%20variation.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/
https://theinterventionalists.com/index.php/journal/article/view/27
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spelling my.iium.irep.1056662023-07-21T08:43:53Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/ Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev Ahmad, Nur Fathihah RD Surgery Introduction: The coeliac axis and its major branches are known to have various anatomical variations, some are more common than others. The presence of variants may complicate the upper abdominal procedures, such as open surgery or interventional radiology procedures. Result: This is a case of a 65-year-old gentleman with various co-morbidities, who initially presented with pyogenic spondylodiscitis. On day 7 of admission, he developed hypovolaemic shock secondary to upper gastrointestinal bleed, requiring massive transfusion protocol. An oesophago-gastroduodenoscopy (OGDS) revealed a Forrest 1b ulcer. Initially the bleeding stopped with endoclip application, but the haemorrhage subsequently resumed with further massive transfusion required. An abdominal CT angiogram (CTA) was then performed revealing active arterial extravasation at the site of the endoclip. However, the actual bleeding artery was not apparent. An aberrant right hepatic artery was observed on the CTA. A subsequent urgent embolization angiographic run revealed some contrast extravasation from the gastroduodenal artery, which arise from the common hepatic artery. 5 pieces of 0.035” coils were deployed at the bleeder site. No extravasation seen on the final angiographic run. However, the next day, the patient continued to developed massive haemorrhage. Another abdominal CTA demonstrated further similar extravasation of contrast near the endoclips. Another urgent embolization was then performed. Angiogram via the aberrant right hepatic artery revealed the presence of an accessory gastroduodenal artery, which in turn demonstrated sizable contrast extravasation near the endoclips. A microcatheter was used to deliver Histoacryl glue for embolization, which subsequently stemmed the bleeding. Conclusion: This case highlights the difficulty that arises during interventional procedure from the presence of anatomical variant of the coeliac axis. Although CTA is usually an important assessment tool prior to embolization, the accessory gastroduodenal artery was not opacified in the pre-embolization CTA. This underlines the need for an interventional radiologist to expect difficulty when variants are present Lönge Medikal Sdn Bhd. 2022-03-31 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/7/105666_Aberration%20in%20variation.pdf Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi and Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali and Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah and Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev and Ahmad, Nur Fathihah (2022) Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant. The Interventionalist Journal, 2 (1). p. 1. E-ISSN 2785-8944 https://theinterventionalists.com/index.php/journal/article/view/27 10.32896/tij.v2n1.1-5
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RD Surgery
spellingShingle RD Surgery
Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi
Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali
Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah
Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev
Ahmad, Nur Fathihah
Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
description Introduction: The coeliac axis and its major branches are known to have various anatomical variations, some are more common than others. The presence of variants may complicate the upper abdominal procedures, such as open surgery or interventional radiology procedures. Result: This is a case of a 65-year-old gentleman with various co-morbidities, who initially presented with pyogenic spondylodiscitis. On day 7 of admission, he developed hypovolaemic shock secondary to upper gastrointestinal bleed, requiring massive transfusion protocol. An oesophago-gastroduodenoscopy (OGDS) revealed a Forrest 1b ulcer. Initially the bleeding stopped with endoclip application, but the haemorrhage subsequently resumed with further massive transfusion required. An abdominal CT angiogram (CTA) was then performed revealing active arterial extravasation at the site of the endoclip. However, the actual bleeding artery was not apparent. An aberrant right hepatic artery was observed on the CTA. A subsequent urgent embolization angiographic run revealed some contrast extravasation from the gastroduodenal artery, which arise from the common hepatic artery. 5 pieces of 0.035” coils were deployed at the bleeder site. No extravasation seen on the final angiographic run. However, the next day, the patient continued to developed massive haemorrhage. Another abdominal CTA demonstrated further similar extravasation of contrast near the endoclips. Another urgent embolization was then performed. Angiogram via the aberrant right hepatic artery revealed the presence of an accessory gastroduodenal artery, which in turn demonstrated sizable contrast extravasation near the endoclips. A microcatheter was used to deliver Histoacryl glue for embolization, which subsequently stemmed the bleeding. Conclusion: This case highlights the difficulty that arises during interventional procedure from the presence of anatomical variant of the coeliac axis. Although CTA is usually an important assessment tool prior to embolization, the accessory gastroduodenal artery was not opacified in the pre-embolization CTA. This underlines the need for an interventional radiologist to expect difficulty when variants are present
format Article
author Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi
Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali
Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah
Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev
Ahmad, Nur Fathihah
author_facet Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi
Md Ralib @ Md Raghib, Ahmad Razali
Shaharuddin, Nur Adilah
Shamsuddin Perisamy, Rajeev
Ahmad, Nur Fathihah
author_sort Halim Lim, Aidi Aswadi
title Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
title_short Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
title_full Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
title_fullStr Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
title_full_unstemmed Aberration in variation: deception by a CTA occult bleeding variant
title_sort aberration in variation: deception by a cta occult bleeding variant
publisher Lönge Medikal Sdn Bhd.
publishDate 2022
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/7/105666_Aberration%20in%20variation.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/105666/
https://theinterventionalists.com/index.php/journal/article/view/27
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