Coexistent rare hepatic artery variants as a pitfall during embolization: dorsal pancreatic artery mistaken for gastroduodenal artery
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    Interventional Radiology - Case Report 2016
    P: 95-97
    February 2011

    Coexistent rare hepatic artery variants as a pitfall during embolization: dorsal pancreatic artery mistaken for gastroduodenal artery

    Diagn Interv Radiol 2011;17(1):95-97
    1. Department of Radiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
    No information available.
    No information available
    Received Date: 10.11.2009
    Accepted Date: 27.05.2010
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    ABSTRACT

    We present a 39-year-old patient with massive duodenal bleeding ulcer. The patient had multiple variants in his hepatic arterial anatomy that led us to erroneously embolize the dorsal pancreatic artery presuming it to be the gastroduodenal artery. Due to this erroneous presumption, our patient continued to have upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Repeat angiogram was performed, during which the actual gastroduodenal artery was recognized and embolized. To our knowledge, this rare combination of anatomic variants in the hepatic artery as a pitfall during gastroduodenal artery embolization leading to inadvertent embolization of the dorsal pancreatic artery has not been described in the literature.

    Keywords: therapeutic embolization, dorsal pancreatic artery, gastroduodenal artery, complications, duodenal ulcer

    References

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