Togawa Koji, Nakatsuka Seishi, Tsukada Jitsuro, Ito Nobutake, Yamamoto Yosuke, Kogo Togo, Yoshikawa Hiroki, Misu Manabu, Tamura Masashi, Soga Shigeyoshi, Inoue Masanori, Yashiro Hideki, Kurata Tadayoshi, Okada Masahiro, Jinzaki Masahiro
Department of Radiology, Japanese Red Cross Shizuoka Hospital, Japan.
Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Keio University School of Medicine, Japan.
Interv Radiol (Higashimatsuyama). 2023 Aug 11;8(3):130-135. doi: 10.22575/interventionalradiology.2022-0027. eCollection 2023 Nov 1.
Image-guided percutaneous drainage for abscesses is known as a safe and effective treatment. The computed tomography-guided percutaneous drainage kit (SB Kawasumi Co., Ltd.), developed on the basis of a modified trocar method, has made it possible to complete the procedure only under computed tomography guidance without radiographic fluoroscopy. This study investigated the feasibility and safety of for abscess drainage.
In this retrospective observational study, 28 procedures in 27 patients (18 men and 9 women; age 67.0 ± 12.3 years) who underwent computed tomography-guided drainage using between March and December 2021 at seven affiliated hospitals were analyzed. Patients with symptomatic, puncturable on computed tomography and refractory abscesses were included. Technical success (successful drainage with computed tomography alone), primary clinical success (successful drainage with alone), secondary clinical success (avoidance of surgery), and complications were evaluated.
The sites of the abscesses were the intraperitoneal, retroperitoneal, and thoracic cavities in 19, 5, and 2 patients, respectively, and subcutaneous tissue in 1 patient. The mean size of the abscesses was 7.1 ± 3.4 cm. The technical success rate was 96.4%; the ligament of the puncture route could not be penetrated in one case. The primary clinical success rate was 77.8%, whereas the secondary clinical success rate of catheter upsizing or replacement was 96.3%. Complications included one case of biliary pleurisy that required drainage.
is a useful device that allows abscess drainage using only computed tomography guidance without radiographic fluoroscopy.