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  • Title: Hybrid Therapy Consisting of Bowel Resection and Fluoroscopic-Assisted Balloon Thrombectomy for Small Bowel Infarction Caused by Acute Mesenteric Venous Thrombosis.
    Author: Xu R, Tang L, Wang X, Zhang T, Zhou Z, Wang M, Qin S, Zhang S.
    Journal: Ann Vasc Surg; 2019 Aug; 59():202-207. PubMed ID: 30802573.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: To investigate the effect of bowel resection combined with fluoroscopic-assisted balloon thrombectomy for small bowel infarction caused by acute mesenteric venous thrombosis (AMVT). METHODS: Between June 2016 and August 2017, nine patients (seven males and two females; range, 40-73 years; mean, 55.11 ± 10.08 years) with small bowel infarction caused by AMVT underwent bowel resection combined with fluoroscopic-assisted balloon thrombectomy. The demographics, risk factors, therapeutic effect, complications, mortality, and follow-up of the study population were assessed. RESULTS: The effective rate was 100% with substantial clinical improvement in symptoms. All patients underwent small bowel resection with primary anastomosis. The length of bowel resection ranged from 60 to 170 cm (108.67 ± 35.05). In none of the cases there was surgery with second look. The patients were discharged 13-42 days (20.11 ± 8.75) after admission without perioperative complication or death. The follow-up period was 8-21 months (12.89 ± 4.65), and the follow-up rate was 100%. All patients returned to normal activities, regained lost body weight, and remained asymptomatic during the follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS: The combination therapy of bowel resection and fluoroscopic-assisted balloon thrombectomy is technically feasible and may be beneficial for small bowel infarction caused by AMVT in removing a thrombus efficiently, relieving symptoms rapidly, averting second-look surgery, lowering extensive surgical resections, and improving the prognosis.
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