Interventional Radiological Management and Prevention of Complications after Pancreatic Surgery: Drainage, Embolization and Islet Auto-Transplantation.
Cristina MosconiMaria Adriana CocozzaFilippo PiacentinoFederico FontanaAlberta CappelliFrancesco ModestinoAndrea CoppolaDiego PalumboPaolo MarraPaola MaffiLorenzo PiemontiAntonio SecchiClaudio RicciRiccardo CasadeiGianpaolo BalzanoMassimo FalconiGiulio CarcanoAntonio BasileAnna Maria IerardiGianpaolo CarrafielloFrancesco De CobelliRita GolfieriMassimo VenturiniPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
Pancreatic surgery still remains burdened by high levels of morbidity and mortality with a relevant incidence of complications, even in high volume centers. This review highlights the interventional radiological management of complications after pancreatic surgery. The current literature regarding the percutaneous drainage of fluid collections due to pancreatic fistulas, percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage due to biliary leaks and transcatheter embolization (or stent-graft) due to arterial bleeding is analyzed. Moreover, also, percutaneous intra-portal islet auto-transplantation for the prevention of pancreatogenic diabetes in case of extended pancreatic resection is also examined. Moreover, a topic not usually treated in other similar reviewsas percutaneous intra-portal islet auto-transplantation for the prevention of pancreatogenic diabetes in case of extended pancreatic resection is also one of our areas of focus. In islet auto-transplantation, the patient is simultaneously donor and recipient. Differently from islet allo-transplantation, it does not require immunosuppression, has no risk of rejection and is usually efficient with a small number of transplanted islets.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- ultrasound guided
- coronary artery bypass
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- cell therapy
- systematic review
- radiofrequency ablation
- risk factors
- surgical site infection
- case report
- atrial fibrillation
- coronary artery disease
- newly diagnosed
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- acute coronary syndrome