Purpose.To analyse the technical success of pelvic embolization in our institution and to assess periprocedural hemodynamic status and morbidity/mortality coleman 125 ut parts of all pelvic trauma patients who underwent pelvic embolization.Methods.A retrospective analysis of patients with a pelvic fracture due to trauma who underwent arterial embolization was performed.
Clinical data, pelvic radiographs, contrast-enhanced CT-scans, and angiographic findings were reviewed.Subsequently, the technical success and peri-procedural hemodynamic status were evaluated and described.Results.19 trauma patients with fractures fr6738 of the pelvis underwent arterial embolization.
Initially, 10/19 patients (53%) were hemodynamically unstable prior to embolization.Technical success of embolization was 100%.14/19 patients (74%) were stable after embolization, and treatment success was high as 74%.Conclusion.
Angiography with subsequent embolization should be performed in patients with a pelvic fracture due to trauma and hemodynamic instability, after surgical intervention or with a persistent arterial blush indicative of an active bleeding on CT.