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
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.