A pathological study following bronchial artery embolization for haemoptysis in cystic fibrosis.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalBritish journal of diseases of the chest
Year 1980
A detailed post-mortem study is reported on an adult with cystic fibrosis who died in respiratory failure three weeks after selective bronchial artery embolization with gelatin sponge to treat severe haemoptysis. Bronchial arteriography during the procedure showed complete occlusion of the vessel supplying the righ upper lobe and following this the bleeding stopped. However, post-mortem angiography of the same vessel demonstrated disappearance of much of the injected material with contrast bypassing the remaining gelatin to fill the peripheral bronchial arterial bed. This report therefore adds pathological evidence to previous clinical reports which have suggested that this procedure may not produce permanent occlusion of the embolised bronchial artery.
Epistemonikos ID: de9bd8eef9cb7deb48bd4bfe36d6655856b840b4
First added on: May 24, 2023