Monday, November 26, 2012

Hepatic Artery Complications Following Liver Transplant

After a liver transplant, the anastomosed hepatic artery, portal vein, and hepatic veins/IVC can all be a source of problems.  Of the three systems, the hepatic artery connection(s) tends to be the most common offender, particularly with stenosis and thrombosis at the anastomosis site. The incidence of hepatic anastomosis complications has been reported at somewhere between 4-25%.

Problems are usually detected on routine Doppler ultrasound of the hepatic vasculature.

The hepatic artery normally demonstrates a low-resistance waveform with continuous forward flow during diastole. The resistive index is somewhere between 0.5 - 0.7. With stenosis, there is a focal area of increased flow with post-stenotic aliasing, and, as with stenoses elsewhere, there can be a downstream tardus parvus waveform.


Normal hepatic low-resistance arterial flow (from Ref 3)

In this post-transplant hepatic artery stenosis a focal area of increased flow and downstream turbulence corresponded to a stenosis seen on angiogram (top two images).  A tardus-parvus waveform is present in the downstream arteries (bottom). Images from Ref. 3



If Doppler ultrasound detects a problem, the area can be further investigated with angiography.  In the two examples below, the high-grade stenosis turned out to be asymptomatic and not to be flow-limiting, so therapy was deferred... however stenosis can lead to graft dysfunction, bilary leak (transplant bile ducts receive all their blood supply from the transplant hepatic artery), or frank hepatic necrosis.


High-grade stenosis at the hepatic arterial anastomosis.


Friday, November 23, 2012

Aorto-enteric fistula

There are a number of serious complications of surgical aorta repair, one of which is... aorto-enteric fistula (AEF).   Patients can present with massive GI bleeding (hematemesis, melena/hematochezia), sepsis/fever, and abdominal pain... and the prognosis is unfavorable.

Aortoenteric fistula usually occurs at the proximal anastomosis (region of infrarenal aorta and 3rd/4th part of the duodenum) and can result in massive bleeding into the bowel.  Although AEF is usually separated from "perigraft infection" in terms of classification, the graft is invariably infected in aorto-enteric fistula (backflow from enteric contents). Infection of the graft causing the AEF is also considered a significant etiology (40% of infected grafts become AEFs) as prosthetic material can serve as a nidus for bacterial growth. Some feel that infection may play a role in all AEFs, but many may arise from lower-grade infections.

Graft-enteric fistulas can potentially occur anywhere along the graft, although they tend to occur more proximally. Of course, they're more common at weak points such anastomotic suture lines, but a fistula can occur even with native aneurysms (considered a primary aorto-enteric fistula).

So what are the findings with an aorto-enteric fistula?  If upper GI bleeding is the provisional diagnosis and the patient is stable, EGD is often used as a first line modality.  But if it's not suspected / or if the EGD is not definitive, then the patient may go to CT.  As the name AEF implies, you look for an exchange of contents between the aorta and the bowel.  Gas into the area area around the graft, and blood into the adjacent bowel. Actual visualization of extravasation is rare.




Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The Vasculitides: Wegener Granulomatosis (WG)

Although systemic disorders, most of the small-vessel vasculitides seem to have a predilection for the same sites: lungs, kidneys, and skin. Another example of these vascultides -- and probably the most well-known ANCA + vasculitis is Wegener Granulomatosis.





Like Churg-Strauss and Microscopic Polyangiitis, these can attack both the lungs and the kidneys (Goodpasture's syndrome is another condition with pulmonary-renal involvement... but it's not a vasculitis).  Wegener Granulomatosis is actually associated with a triad

1) Upper airway involvement (e.g. sinusitis, tracheobronchial thickening)
2) Lower airway involvment
3) Renal involvment (glomerulonephritis)

(even though the triad is helpful, it's not complete, since WG has been documented to attack just about every system in the body)

Unlike Churg-Strauss and Microscopic Polyangiitis, however, Wegener Granulomatosis has certain radiologic features that are relatively characteristic to it.

The first of these is the characteristic cavitating pulmonary nodules in Wegener Granulomatosis. Although WG can present with a wide variety of nonspecific pulmonary findings, the cavitating nodules are characteristic and "pulmonary nodules or masses" are present in 70% of patients at some point in the disease.


Multiple pulmonary nodules in a first presentation of bx-proven Wegner Granulomatosis.  The groundglass halo is compatible with perinodular capillaritis and alveolar hemorrhage.



Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The Vasculitides: Henoch-Schonlein Purpura (HSP)

When Henoch-Scholein Purpura (HSP) comes up, the association most quickly made is that of a child with erythematous papules and palpable purpura...

... but the source of the palpable purpura is a small-vessel vasculitis, and like other vasculitides, HSP is a multisystem disorder, affecting the joints, kidneys, and GI tract. The official 1990 ACR criteria are 2+/4 of:

1. Palpable purpura
2. Age younger than 20y at disease onset
3. Bowel angina
4. Biopsy showing granulocytes in the wall of arterioles or venules.



Like in microscopic polyangiitis (see yesterday's post) the glomerulonephritis from the small-vessel vasculitis is actually the most serious aspect of HSP, but it's not well-appreciated radiologically.

GI manifestations of HSP, however, can be picked up... and since it's estimated that 65-75% of people with HSP have GI symptoms (colicky abdominal pain, vomiting, bloody stools), the radiological findings in HSP are characteristic enough to help determine if a patient's acute abdomen is related to the vasculitis or if it has some other source.

One way to think about the GI involvement of HSP is that what it's doing to the skin... it's also doing to the bowel.  The abdominal pain in HSP is related to visceral purpura leading to submucosal and mucosal extravasation of blood and edema, which can lead to ulceration of the bowel mucosa. this can occur anywhere from the duodenum to the colon, and can often be seen with endoscopy.

On fluoroscopy, these changes result in thickening of the bowel wall, with thickened folds, thumbprinting, separation of loops, and prolonged transit time.  Infrequently (1-5%) the bowel wall thickening can act as a lead point for intussusception.  This appearance is not specific for HSP, however, and in older patients, other more common diagnoses, such as Crohns disease or infection should be entertained.  Lupus causing small artery vasculitis should also be entertained.


Single-contrast fluoroscopic study on an older patient (25Y) for which the clinical team wanted to rule out Henoch-Schonlein Purpura. Although HSP is rare in adults, the fluoroscopic findings are not incompatible with the bowel wall thickening from the vasculitis.  Definitive diagnosis rests with biopsy.


Monday, November 12, 2012

The Vasculitides: Microscopic Polyangiitis (MPA)

There are no pictures in this post... because there is no classic radiographic appearance of microscopic polyangiitis (MPA).  Just as its generic name implies, it has a nonspecific presentation...

An ANCA+ small vessel vasculitis in the group of Wegener's granulomatosis and perhaps Churg-Strauss syndrome, microscopic polyangiitis is being frequently "isolated" out from prior studies in which it was lumped in with other, more well-recognized vasculitides... for instance, it's been recognized that in some of the published series investigating polyarteritis nodosa, some of the cases were actually microscopic polyangiitis. They have many of the same clinical symptoms.

So how could you make a prospective radiologic call of microscopic polyangiitis?  It would seem that you can't.

But you can choose not to suggest it when certain features are present.

1) As the name implies, it's a microscopic vasculitis, affecting capillaries, arterioles, and venules.  Findings of medium or large vessel vasculitis on angiography do not occur.

2) Polyarteritis nodosa never involves the lungs.  If you have findings suspicious for PAN, but with lung involvement (alveolar hemorrhage, diffuse alveolar damage), then microscopic polyangiitis is reasonable to put on the differential in its place.

3) Polyarteritis nodosa does not cause rapidly-progressive glomerulonephritis.

4) Microscopic polyangiitis does not cause renal aneurysms.

The age of presentation of MPA (avg. 50Y), is not significantly different than in other vasculitides.  The renal-pulmonary presentation is similar to Goodpasture's syndrome.  Occasionally, it can affect the GI tract, similar to other small vessel vasculitides, such as Henoch-Schonlein purpura.

---
1. "Vasculitis" Ball GV and Bridges SL. Oxford publishers (2002)
2. Ha HK, Lee SH, Rha SE. "Radiologic Features of Vasculitis Involving the Gastrointestinal Tract" RadioGraphics 2000; 20:779–794

Sunday, November 11, 2012

The Vasculitides: Churg-Strauss Syndrome (CSS)

Churg-Strauss syndrome is a small vessel vasculitis that represents a combined allergic granulomatosis and angiitis.  Definition of the syndrome has altered over time, but according to a recent classification scheme it has been included in the same group as Wegener's granulomatosis and microscopic polyangiitis, both of which are strongly associated with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), but whether Churg-Strauss truly belongs to this group is still yet to be definitively determined.

A multisystem disorder -- like all the vasculitides -- the manifestations of Churg-Strauss can be protean, but the most commonly symptomatic organ is the lungs, and eosinophilic asthma is considered a hallmark of the disease.

The American College or Rheumatology included "non-fixed pulmonary infiltrates on chest radiography" in 1990 as one of the six criteria for Churg-Strauss (4+/6 has a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 99.7%)...

1) asthma
2) eosinophilia of greater than 10% of the peripheral WBC count
3) mononeuropathy or polyneuropathy
4) non-fixed non-fixed pulmonary infiltrates on chest radiography
5) paranasal sinus abnormalities
6) biopsy containing a blood vessle with extravascular eosinophils

... but not every diagnosis scheme for Churg-Strauss includes imaging, and some of the alternate schemes claim a similar or better sensitivity and specificity.

This isn't totally surprising, because the radiographic findings in Churg-Strauss are incredibly nonspecific. The most commonly correlated findings on Chest CT are nonspecific groundglass opacities, usually with a peripheral distribution... or centrilobular nodules and tree-in-bud opacities, almost equally as nonspecific. Both the upper and lower lung zone can be affected, but the symptoms are usually more mild than with Wegener's granulomatosis. Cavitary nodules are reported as rare in Churg-Strauss, and if cavitary nodules are present, another etiology (e.g. Wegener's) should be entertained.

An HRCT image from an 58Y asthmatic lady who had been diagnosed with Churg-Strauss Syndrome.  The multifocal, nonsegmental centrilobular nodules and tree-in-bud opacities (green ovals) are compatible with Churg-Strauss syndrome, but are completely nonspecific and cannot be separated from other infectious/inflammatory etiologies.

Two slices from a chest CT in a 47Y lady diagnosed with Churg-Strauss syndrome.  She had a long history of waxing and waning peripheral ground glass opacities, similar to those seen above.  Ground glass opacities have been linked to small foci of alveolar hemorrhage (capillaritis).


Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Bugs Burst Out -- Mycotic Aneurysm


Aneurysms arise when the arterial wall is weakened and the arterial pressure overcomes the tensile strength of the wall (see "Laplace's theorem" post on 11/7/12). This wall weakness and the formation of an aneurysm is most often a combination of atherosclerosis, aging (cystic medial necrosis), and hypertension...

...but this isn't the only way to weaken the arterial wall. A mycotic aneurysm can also arise if an infectious process begins to weaken the wall. Although this a much less common event than a "bland" aneurysm, its prognosis is different and its treatment can be more tricky.

There are four main ways that an infectious aneurysm can form:
1.  Septic emboli of cardiac origin ("Mycotic aneurysm") lodging in the lumen or vasa vasorum of peripheral arteries. These "mycotic" aneurysms (more likely bacterial... not fungal) have been recorded as occuring in virtually every artery, although they more commonly occur in the aorta, intracranial, superior mesenteric, and femoral arteries. The continued refinement of antibacterial therapy and the ability to replace infected cardiac valves have lead to a decrease in this etiology.  Because the etiology is partly embolic, these aneurysms tend to form at arterial branch points and occlusions.

2. Microbial arteritis with aneurysm formation: With the decline of the prevalence of intracardiac vegetations, this etiology -- although rare -- has been becoming relatively more common. If the intima is interrupted (e.g. atherosclerosis), then bacteria have the capacity to penetrate into the arterial wall. If the infection takes hold, a pseudoaneurysm can result. Compatible with atherosclerosis, the aorta is the most common site for this process. Immunsuppresion, hemodialysis, and radiation arteritis are considered risk factors. It has been noted that the diseased aorta is more vulnerable to Salmonella spp.

3. Infection of a pre-existing aneurysm: Although colonization of aortic aneurysm walls has been shown to not be rare (~15%), whether infection of a pre-existing aneurysm is a significant mechanism for development of an infectious/inflammatory aneurysm is still controversial.

4. Post-traumatic infected pseudoaneurysm:  These are reported as being more common in IVDUs and an increasing incidence of this etiology may also be partly due to increased numbers of percutaneous interventional therapies.

Signs of an infected central arterial aneurysm can be subtle. Elevated WBCs, ESR are sensitive, but not specific. Positive blood cultures in a patient with an aneurysm increase the specificity, but are not as sensitive (50%), so negative blood cultures alone are not enough to rule out the diagnosis.
With the lack of a definitive lab test, imaging becomes vital.


Although U/S is the usual screening tool for abdominal aortic aneurym, it is unable to differentiate between an infectious or a bland aneurysm.

CTA, however, provides the information necessary to help with a diagnosis.




Friday, November 9, 2012

The SA Node Artery

Continuing down the RCA... right after the conus artery, a small branch splits off to supply the sinoatrial (SA) node, the aptly named SA node artery.

...Well, it sometimes (~55-65%) comes off the right coronary artery... the rest of the time it arises from the LCx (30-45%).
A smaller % (<10%) of patients have a dual blood supply.

But regardless of which circulation it arises from, it can be recognized by its course toward the SVC.





Thursday, November 8, 2012

Maximum fluid intensity -- bSSFP MRA

An MRI sequence that's not always recognized as an angiogram is the balanced steady-state free precession (bSSFP sequence... a.k.a. "trueFISP" or "b-TFE" or "FIESTA").


Example of an axial b-TFE image


But what is a balanced steady-state free precession sequence?

Well... first of all, what is a steady-state free precession sequence?


1) Steady-state sequence and "unspoiled" GRE

The steady-state sequence is inherently a gradient echo technique... but it's considered "T2/T1 weighted" (which results in it having the highest signal intensity of all sequences)... so what exactly does this mean?

First... how is it T2-weighted?

Unspoiled gradient echo relies on a short TR (time to repetition). If the TR is shorter than the T2 relaxation time, residual coherent transverse magnetization builds with each RF pulse (T2-weighted imaging relies on transverse magnetization for its effects). Remember that for a time of flight sequence (see posts from 10/14 and 10/17), repetitive short TR radiofrequency pulses do not allow much recovery of longitudinal magnetization, suppressing the the T1 signal and allowing for flow-related enhancement.  The situation is similar here, with quick, repetitive RF pulses, building up coherent transverse magnetization


With a short enough TR, there will still be some coherent transverse magnetization at the time of the next pulse (arrows are not very widely dispersed and there is a net transverse magnetization in the xy direction). There is also limited T1 longitudinal relaxation with a short TR (arrows not much recovered in the z axis). For a long enough TR, however, the spins have more time to dephase (transverse magnetization decays completely), and there is no net transverse magnetization vector (arrows going all whichaway).  There is also more time for longitudinal relaxation along the z axis.


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Under Tension -- Laplace's Theorem

The tangential tension on a blood vessel is thought of as obeying Laplace's theorem -- tension is a product of the pressure on the wall and the radius of the vessel.

Tangential tension = Pressure x radius
T = Pr

This formula is most appropriate for measuring force per unit tube length. For a more generalized case of tangential stress against the wall at a point, the wall thickness also plays an important role (as would seem intuituve)

Tangential stress = Pressure x (radius/wall thickness)
t = P (r / w)





Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Shear-activated nanotherapeutic particles (SA-NTs)

...speaking of shear stress (11/5/12). The NEJM recently put out an article highlighting research in "Shear Activated Nanotherapeutic Particles" (SA-NTs).

To condense the article... the idea is that since flow dynamics are often altered in areas of vascular pathology (see the idea of "flow separation" in yesterday's post), this microenvironment could be a way to target drug therapy.  If nanoparticles could be engineered to release fibrinolytics in areas of high shear stress (e.g. areas of stenosis), then this highly targeted t-PA drug delivery could avoid the risks of systemic t-PA. According to the article, SA-NT bound with t-PA offers the same therapeutic effect as systemic t-PA at 1/100 the dose.

An image from the article demonstrates the principle (below)


(from Ref 1)


... but since at a bifurcation of blood vessels, there are natural, nonpathologic regions of high shear stress, this raises the question why SA-NTs don't dissociate on their way to the stenosis.  According to the article, the SA-NTs are only released by "pathologically high" shear stress.

Although a promising idea, the article stresses that there is still much research to be done before SA-NTs could be used clinically.

---
1. Wootton DM and Alevriadou BR. "The Shear Stress of Busting Blood Clots" N Engl J Med 2012; 367:1361-136



Monday, November 5, 2012

Hemodynamics -- Turbulence & flow separation

If only blood flow were as simple as concentric fluid layers sliding over each other in an ideal tube. The truth is much more turbulent.

Pouiselle's law (see the 10/28/2012 post) acts as if blood were a laminar fluid. In this situation, resistance is linear with respect to pressure and flow. But human blood vessels don't usually fufill the criteria necessay for the development of the nice, orderly parabolic flow of Pouiselle's law. Tortuosity and multiple branch points end up causing shear to the blood flow, and complex helical blood flow is often the result.

Furthermore, at a certain velocity -- the critical velocity -- the laminar model breaks down and the fluid takes on a life of its own.  Eddies, vortices, and random velocity vectors form in the flow and become a separate, significant factor for resistance to the flow.  When this occurs, flow is roughly proportional to √ (∆P).




So what affects how quickly a fluid becomes turbulent?  Reynolds found that the fluid's  

density (ρ) g/cm3
velocity (ν) cm/sec
diameter of the vessel (D) (cm), and
viscosity (μ) g/sec/cm2

were all factors, and related by:

Reynold's original 1883 apparatus from which he formulated the relationship of Reynold's number.


Sunday, November 4, 2012

The Uterine Artery

Subselective catheterization of the uterine artery can be important in a wide range of applications, from uterine artery embolization (UAE), to embolic treatment of adenomyosis, or for control of postpartum uterine bleeding.

The uterine artery is usually a branch off the internal iliac artery (anterior division), and can be recognized by its characteristic location and its strikingly serpiginous distribution.  It frequently anastomoses with the nearby ipsilateral ovarian artery (which originates more distantly from the aorta, just below the renal arteries (or occasionally from the renal arteries). This anastomosis can become significant in embolization procedures. Occasionally, the ovarian artery may supply a large portion of the uterus, leading to incomplete embolization. Nontarget embolization from the uterine artery to the ovary, leading to premature ovarian failure is also an important consideration.




The arterial anastomoses between the uterine artery and ovarian artery has been shown to be less than 500 microns normally, and use of embolization particles larger than this may help prevent nontarget embolization of the ipislateral ovary.


Selective arteriogram of an enlarged and tortuous left uterine artery.  The artery makes a curve in the left pelvis, around a large fibroid (red arrow). The course of the uterine artery typically includes a hairpin turn where the artery passes through the cardinal ligament at the base of the broad ligament and over the ureter at the level of the cervix to proceed cephalad along the uterine body.



Saturday, November 3, 2012

Eustachian Valve

At the other end from the crista terminalis is the eustachian valve. This structure is also known as "the valve of the IVC" and occurs at the IVC/RA junction. It is theorized to help direct blood flow from the IVC to the foramen ovale in the fetus.

The red transparent oval shows how the intact eustachian valve in the fetus would help direct blood flow through the foramen ovale, bypassing the right-sided circulation


The Eustachian valve occasionally has remnants thick enough to be detected on cardiac CT, ECHO, and sometimes, even with angiography. 




Friday, November 2, 2012

Crista Terminalis

Often incidentally noticed in the right atrium on CT, the crista terminalis is an embryonic remnant of the junction between the sinus venosus and the embryonic right atrial appendage and extends across the right atrium from the SVC to the IVC.





Thursday, November 1, 2012

The Two Branches of the External Iliac Artery

Unlike the internal iliac artery, with its multiple branches to supply the muscles and organs of the pelvis, the external iliac artery is more or less a straight shot through the pelvis to supply the lower extremity.

More or less... there are actually two branches off the external iliac right near the inguinal ring -- one more recognized, and the other... less so.

First... before enumerating the branches... a quick review. What actually demarcates the external iliac artery?  Well... the origin is obvious. It begins at the branch point of the common iliac arteries into the internal and external arteries. But where's the end point?  As soon as the external iliac passes beneath the inguinal ligament, through the femoral canal, it becomes the femoral artery... But in the angiography suite, the inguinal ligament is not likely to be visible during a DSA run, so the branches near the inguinal ring act as a surrogate marker for the transition.

So... these two branches:

1. The inferior epigastric artery 
2. The deep iliac circumflex artery


An internal view of the distal external iliac artery as it leaves the pelvis.  The inferior epigastric artery (IEA) and deep iliac circumflex artery (DICA) branch off right before the external iliac artery enters the femoral canal (and becomes the femoral artery). The red oval highlights the small anastomosis between a branch of the IEA and a branch of the obturator artery, which can become an important collateral pathway in internal or external iliac occlusion.