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Published in: Abdominal Radiology 7/2019

01-07-2019 | Ultrasound | Interventional Radiology

Transrectal and transvaginal catheter drainages and aspirations for management of pelvic fluid collections: technique, technical success rates, and outcomes in 150 patients

Authors: David H. Ballard, Michael C. Gates, Alireza Hamidian Jahromi, Daniel V. Harper, Daniel V. Do, Horacio B. D’Agostino

Published in: Abdominal Radiology | Issue 7/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate outcomes of image-guided transrectal/transvaginal (TR/TV) drainage for symptomatic pelvic fluid collections (SPFCs).

Materials and methods

Single-center retrospective study of 150 consecutive patients (36 males, 114 females, average age 41 years) who underwent attempted TR/TV drainages of SPFCs during an 11-year, 5-month period. All patients presented with pain and had SPFCs with rectal or vaginal contact on preceding diagnostic CT. Routine technique included Foley catheter insertion, image-guidance with ultrasound and fluoroscopy, 18 g/20 cm Chiba needles, and Seldinger technique for catheter insertion. No anoscope or speculum was used. SPFCs causes were classified by etiology including postoperative—70 (47%); gynecologic—49 (33%); and gastrointestinal—31 (21%). Resolutions of the SPFCs without the need for surgical intervention, collection recurrence, and complications were assessed. Surgical management after attempted TR/TV drainage was considered a failure.

Results

Technical success was achieved in 172/180 procedures [TR 128/134 (95%); TV 44/46 (96%)]. TR/TV drainage successfully managed SPFCs in 141/150 patients (94% success rate) and 145/150 patients (97%) did not require surgical intervention; 4 patients with failed TR/TV drainage attempts were managed conservatively. In 5 patients requiring surgery, 4 were after technically successful TR/TV and 1 was after a failed TR attempt. Complications occurred in 4 (3%) patients: 2 bladder punctures (both resolved with medical management), 1 propagation of sepsis, and 1 hemorrhagic return from TR drainage that prompted surgical exploration.

Conclusion

Transrectal and transvaginal drainage had high technical success rates and were successful in managing the majority (141/150; 94%) of patients with pelvic fluid collections.
Literature
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go back to reference Ballard DH, Flanagan ST, D’Agostino HB. Abscess Drainage. In Shafa J and Kee S (1st Ed.), Learning Interventional Radiology 2019. Elsevier Inc Ballard DH, Flanagan ST, D’Agostino HB. Abscess Drainage. In Shafa J and Kee S (1st Ed.), Learning Interventional Radiology 2019. Elsevier Inc
Metadata
Title
Transrectal and transvaginal catheter drainages and aspirations for management of pelvic fluid collections: technique, technical success rates, and outcomes in 150 patients
Authors
David H. Ballard
Michael C. Gates
Alireza Hamidian Jahromi
Daniel V. Harper
Daniel V. Do
Horacio B. D’Agostino
Publication date
01-07-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Abdominal Radiology / Issue 7/2019
Print ISSN: 2366-004X
Electronic ISSN: 2366-0058
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00261-019-01974-9

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