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1.
Acta Trop ; 51(3-4): 281-90, 1992 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1359754

ABSTRACT

Fifty-nine patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis mansoni were investigated by sonography in Northeast Brazil and Central Sudan. The sizes of the organs usually involved in this disease were quantitatively assessed according to a standardized protocol, and measurements were adjusted to the body height of the individual. The results were compared with those of healthy controls matched by sex, age, geographical origin and socio-economic status. Considerable differences were found between patients and controls as well as between residents from the two areas. The liver of both patients and controls from the Sudan was significantly smaller than that of patients and controls from Brazil. Only in Brazil, but not in the Sudan, was the left liver lobe larger in patients than in the controls. The diameter of the portal and the splenic vein, the spleen size and the thickness of the gallbladder wall were significantly increased in patients from both areas. The increase of the portal and splenic vein diameter was significantly correlated with the degree of hepatic periportal fibrosis and the frequency of bleeding from endoscopically proven oesophageal varices in the patients, irrespective of their geographic origin. In contrast, such correlations were not found for the degree of splenomegaly nor for the degree of gallbladder-wall thickening. It is concluded that standardized sonographic organometry permits the assessment of morbidity in hepatosplenic schistosomiasis mansoni under different endemic conditions. Especially the measurement of the portal vein diameter may allow estimation of the risk of gastrointestinal haemorrhage in these patients.


Subject(s)
Esophageal and Gastric Varices/etiology , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/etiology , Liver Diseases, Parasitic/diagnostic imaging , Schistosomiasis mansoni/diagnostic imaging , Splenic Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brazil , Child , Female , Humans , Liver Diseases, Parasitic/complications , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , Schistosomiasis mansoni/complications , Splenic Diseases/complications , Sudan , Ultrasonography
2.
Arq Bras Cardiol ; 53(1): 43-8, 1989 Jul.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2695020

ABSTRACT

The aim of this paper is to review clinical and laboratory features of this unusual pathology and its complications, indicating transcatheter embolization as a first choice for its management. Our case report is of a seven year-old child, with complex pulmonary arteriovenous fistula of the anterior segment of right superior lobe, which was diagnosed mainly by cintilography and pulmonary angiogram. Clinically she had cyanosis, fatigue with exertion, clubbing of the fingers and polycythemia with low partial pressure of oxygen (PAO2: 68.1 mmHg; Sat O2: 92.4%; Hct: 47.5%; Hb: 16 gr%). She did not have Rendu-Osler-Weber disease. The anatomic structure and localization of the complex fistula was showed by cineangiographic study. We preferred to manage this fistula with transcatheter embolization with a 02 gauge stainless steel coil occluding device (Gianturco-Wallace), as it was single and the patient was too young for sustain surgical trauma and the outcome would be positively satisfactory. After the embolization cyanosis was relieved and we could see normal pulmonary circulation following the point of the pre-existing fistula. We concluded that a judicious assessment by cineangiography could help select the transcatheter embolization procedure as an attractive therapeutic approach instead of surgery.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Artery/diagnostic imaging , Pulmonary Veins/diagnostic imaging , Arteriovenous Fistula/diagnostic imaging , Arteriovenous Fistula/therapy , Child , Cineangiography , Embolization, Therapeutic , Female , Humans
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