Abstract

Hepatic artery pseudoaneurysms are an uncommon complication of percutaneous biliary drainage catheter insertion. The authors report a case of a hepatic artery pseudoaneurysm following percutaneous internal-external biliary drain insertion. This led to massive haemobilia when the catheter was removed and presented clinically as life-threatening upper gastrointestinal bleed. The clinical and imaging manifestations are discussed along with the management of the patient.

Highlights

  • Intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) utilises small beamlets of ionising radiation to provide a highKhamfongkhruea et al Biomed Imaging Interv J 2012; 8(1):e5This page number is not for citation purposes use a respiratory gating system

  • The measurements by MapCheck show the gamma index of the planned absolute dose distribution in static and moving targets with gating, resulting in more than 96% passing for all dose rates

  • The absolute dose distribution measured by film for the static target was agreeable with the value of moving target with gating

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Summary

Introduction

Intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) utilises small beamlets of ionising radiation to provide a highKhamfongkhruea et al Biomed Imaging Interv J 2012; 8(1):e5This page number is not for citation purposes use a respiratory gating system. Chen et al [5] studied the dosimetric effects caused by the respiratory motion during IMRT by using Kodak EDR2 films. They concluded that, without the gating system, the dose distribution of the stationary phantom was different from the moving one. Duan et al [7] studied the dosimetric effect of respiration-gated beam with IMRT delivery Their results suggested that low dose rate can reduce the effect of delay and catch-up cycle. Lin et al [2] determined the effect of radiation dose rate with moving target and the gated treatment using step-and-shoot IMRT delivery. The high dose rate gated stepand-shoot IMRT was dosimetrically accurate, shortened the delivery time, and was safe to use clinically

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