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Metropolitan New Jersey Veterinary Medicine Association New Jersey IR or the OR? How interventional radiology can help your patients Chick Weisse, Diplomate ACVS Animal Medical Center, NY, NY [email protected] Following the description of percutaneous arterial catheterization by Sven Ivar Seldinger in 1953, angiography developed into a widely-utilized and essential medical diagnostic tool (for humans). Technological advances have since helped transform this diagnostic modality into a sub-specialization with enormous therapeutic potential. Interventional radiology (IR) involves the use of contemporary imaging techniques such as fluoroscopy and ultrasonography to selectively access vessels and other structures in order to deliver different materials for therapeutic reasons. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES The use of IR techniques in veterinary patients offers a number of advantages compared to more traditional therapies. These procedures are minimally invasive and can therefore lead to reduced peri-operative morbidity and mortality, shorter anesthesia times and shorter hospital stays. Some less equipment-intensive procedures can result in reduced costs as well. In addition, some techniques such as chemoembolization of tumors or palliative stenting for malignant obstructions offer alternative treatment options for patients with various conditions that may not be amenable to standard therapies. The primary disadvantages of IR include the required technical expertise, the specialized equipment necessary (fluoroscopy with or without digital subtraction capabilities), and the large initial capital investment necessary to provide a suitable inventory of catheters, guide wires, balloons, stents and coils. EQUIPMENT AND TECHNIQUE As most of these procedures are minimally invasive (performed through catheters or small holes in the skin), traditional sterile operating rooms are not required, but recommended. Most of these procedures are performed in clean angiography suites. The entry sites receive a traditional sterile scrub, and operators wear full lead gowns, lead thyroid shields, caps, gowns, and masks. The radiation exposure during conventional or C-arm fluoroscopy can be substantial. The operator should review radiation safety guidelines, minimize exposure time and beam size, and maximize shielding and distance from the beam. For many of the more commonly performed IR procedures, a traditional fluoroscopy unit is sufficient. A C-arm fluoroscopy unit has the advantage of mobility of the image intensifier, permitting multiple tangential views without moving the patient. Occasionally, ultrasonography is useful for percutaneous needle access into vessels or other structures. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and “road-mapping” allow high resolution images to be obtained with minimal use of contrast agent which is often a concern in our relatively small veterinary patients. DSA is required for super-selective Page 1 of 4 Metropolitan New Jersey Veterinary Medicine Association New Jersey IR or the OR? How interventional radiology can help your patients Chick Weisse, Diplomate ACVS Animal Medical Center, NY, NY [email protected] angiograms of small caliber vessels and those vessels in the head (or where there is substantial bone which makes angiogram visualization difficult). EXAMPLES OF COMMONLY PERFORMED PROCEDURES Tracheal Stenting Tracheal collapse is a progressive, degenerative disease of the cartilage rings in which hypocellularity and decreased glycosaminoglycan and calcium content leads to dynamic tracheal collapse during respiration. Many of these animals are palliated with medications including anti-inflammatories, cough suppressants, sedatives/tranquilizers, and bronchodilators. Candidates for surgical therapy are those that have failed initial conservative medical management. Various surgical techniques have been described, however the currently recommended surgical therapy for patients with extrathoracic tracheal collapse is extraluminal polyprolpylene ring (or spiral) prostheses. The current therapy in humans is intra-luminal stenting with one of a number of FDA-approved tracheobronchial stents. A number of stents have been evaluated in the canine trachea, including both balloon-expandable (Palmaz), and selfexpanding (Stainless steel, Laser-cut nitinol, Knitted nitinol) stents (see tracheal stent figure).2-4 Clinical improvement rates in 75%-90% of animals treated with selfexpanding, intra-luminal stainless steel stents have been reported.3,4 Immediate complications were mostly minor although there was a peri-operative mortality rate of approximately 10%. Late complications included stent shortening, excessive granulation tissue, progressive tracheal collapse, and stent fracture. Congenital Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunts Portosystemic shunts (PSSs) are anomalous vascular communications between the portal venous and systemic circulations that result in a clinical syndrome with various neurological, biochemical, and hematological consequences. Numerous techniques have been described for intrahepatic PSS attenuation, ranging from careful liver dissection around the shunting vessel to more technically demanding and complicated procedures involving temporary vascular hepatic inflow occlusion for intravascular repair (References available from the author). A review of six major veterinary reports on canine intrahepatic PSSs reveals mortality rates following surgical treatment ranging from 10% to 66%.5-10 The majority of mortalities occurred peri-operatively with fewer than 20% occurring later than one week post-operatively. The goal of IR techniques for intrahepatic PSSs is to reduce the unacceptably high, peri-operative mortality rates associated with traditional open surgical techniques and hopefully improve the outcome for these cases. We have performed over 60 percutaneous transvenous coil Page 2 of 4 Metropolitan New Jersey Veterinary Medicine Association New Jersey IR or the OR? How interventional radiology can help your patients Chick Weisse, Diplomate ACVS Animal Medical Center, NY, NY [email protected] embolizations (PTCE) with a vena caval stent and thrombogenic coils placed within the shunt.11 Peri-operative complications were minor and peri-operative mortalities were comparatively low. Percutaneous Transarterial Embolization and Chemoembolization (TACE) Bland arterial embolization entails selective, catheter-directed delivery of particulate material in order to control hemorrhage, occlude vascular malformations, or reduce tumor growth. Chemoembolization involves selective intra-arterial chemotherapy delivery in conjunction with subsequent particle embolization. Intra-arterial chemoembolization has been shown to result in a 10- to 50-fold increase in intratumoral drug concentrations when compared to systemic intravenous chemotherapy administration.12 Various tumors may respond to chemoembolization as well. We have performed this procedure in dogs with unresectable invasive sinus carcinomas with some encouraging results. Palliative Stenting for Benign or Malignant Obstructions Veterinary patients can present with advanced stages of malignancy in which traditional therapies such as surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy are either associated with excessive morbidity, cost, or poor outcome. Presenting clinical signs may be associated with the tumor location and subsequent local effects rather than the systemic effects of the tumor burden. For example, malignant obstructions of the urinary tract are usually due to transitional cell carcinomas or prostatic tumors and affected animals can present with life-threatening signs associated with urinary tract obstruction. IR techniques involving the placement of intra-luminal stents to palliate similar malignant obstructions in humans have been described (see urethral stent figure). The author has performed a number of palliative stenting procedures in the urinary tract, and upper and lower gastrointestinal tracts to relieve luminal obstructions due to neoplasia in animals as small as a ferret. These IR techniques were rapid, safe, and effective, and complications were minor and uncommon.14 Endourology Similar techniques are currently being employed to manage ureteral obstructions secondary to stones (see ureteral stent figure to right), strictures, or malignancies. These procedures can be performed surgically or with minimal invasiveness (percutaneously or via cystoscopy) to reduce Page 3 of 4 Metropolitan New Jersey Veterinary Medicine Association New Jersey IR or the OR? How interventional radiology can help your patients Chick Weisse, Diplomate ACVS Animal Medical Center, NY, NY [email protected] morbidity and improve outcomes in certain patients. REFERENCES 1 Buback JL, Boothe HW, and Hobson HP. Surgical treatment of tracheal collapse in dogs: 90 cases (1983-1993) Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 1996; 208(3):380-384. 2 Radlinsky MG, Fossum TW, Waler MA, et al. Evaluation of the palmaz stent in the trachea and mainstem bronchi of normal dogs. Veterinary Surgery 1997; 26(2):99-107. 3 Norris JL, Boulay JP, Beck KA, et al. Intraluminal self-expanding stent placement for the treatment of tracheal collapse in dogs (abstr), in Proceedings, 10th Annual Meeting of the American College of Veterinary Surgeons 2000. 4 Moritz A, Schneider M, and Bauer N. Management of advanced tracheal collapse in dogs using intraluminal self-expanding biliary wallstents. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine 2004; 18:31-42. 5 White RN, Burton CA, McEvoy FJ. Surgical treatment of intrahepatic portosystemic shunts in 45 dogs. Veterinary Record 1998; 142:358-365. 6 Bostwick DR, Twedt DC. Intrahepatic and extrahepatic portal venous anomalies in dogs: 52 cases (1982-1992). Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 1995; 206(8):1181-1185. 7 Komtebedde J, Forsyth SF, Breznock EM, et al. Intrahepatic portosystemic venous anomaly in the dog perioperative management and complications. Veterinary Surgery 1991; 20:37-426. 8 Breznock EM, Berger B, Pendray D, et al. Surgical manipulation of intrahepatic portocaval shunts in dogs. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 1983; 182:798-805. 9 Tisdall PLC, Hunt GB, Bellenger CR, et al. Congenital portosystemic shunts in maltese and Australian cattle dogs. Australian Veterinary Journal 1994; 71:174-178. 10 Kyles AE, Gregory CR, Jackson J, et al. Evaluation of a portocaval venograft and ameroid ring for the occlusion of intrahepatic portocaval shunts in dogs. Veterinary Surgery 2001; 30(2):161-169. 11 Weisse C, Solomon JA, Holt D, et al. Percutaneous transvenous coil embolization of canine intrahepatic portosystemic shunts: Short term results in 14 dogs (abstr), in Proceedings, 13th Annual Meeting of the American College of Veterinary Surgeons 2003; 21-22. 12 Dyet J, Ettles D, Nicholson A, eds., et al. Textbook of Endovascular Procedures. 1st ed. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone, 2000:357-367. 13 Valji K, ed. 1999;12,225. 14 Vascular and Interventional Radiology. 1 st ed. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co, Weisse C, Hume DZ, Berent A, et al. Palliative Stenting for Malignant Obstructions in a Dog, Cat, and Ferret (abstr) Submitted to the 14th Annual Meeting of the American College of Veterinary Surgeons. Page 4 of 4