Introducing PHIL (precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid) – a new embolic agent for the body interventional radiologist
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    Interventional Radiology - Technical Note
    P: 140-142
    March 2020

    Introducing PHIL (precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid) – a new embolic agent for the body interventional radiologist

    Diagn Interv Radiol 2020;26(2):140-142
    1. Department of Radiology, Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom
    2. Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
    3. Department of Interventional Radiology, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
    4. Shanghai Institute of Medical Imaging, Shanghai, China
    No information available.
    No information available
    Received Date: 10.02.2019
    Accepted Date: 21.06.2019
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    ABSTRACT

    A number of embolic agents are currently available each with their own properties. Precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid (PHIL) is a new dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) compatible embolic agent with a number of specific properties which make it of interest to interventional radiologists. We review the use of PHIL in a non-neurointerventional setting, describing its use in a range of procedures such as trauma embolization, pseudoaneurysm embolization, and tumor embolization. PHIL's properties include a lack of skin discoloration, the possibility of rapid injection and a lack of glare artifact on follow-up computed tomography imaging. These properties make it an important new tool in the armamentarium of the body interventional radiologist.

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