Abstract

This report summarizes a 10-year experience (1978-1987) in a metropolitan hospital with 102 patients sustaining a variety of complex or inaccessible vascular injuries. Management included the application of occlusive interventional arteriographic techniques. Regional injuries included head and neck (56%), trunk (13%), and extremity (32%). Techniques of vascular occlusion were often performed in conjunction with the initial arteriographic evaluation and were comprised of particulate embolization (42%), placement of mechanical devices (36%), or tissue adhesives (1%), or a combination (21%). There were no deaths in this series and the only complications included four cases of dislodgement of the occlusive agent. We demonstrate that endovascular occlusion is a useful, safe and efficacious procedure in selected patients with complex, inaccessible or life-threatening vascular trauma.

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