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Left Renal Vein (leave + renal_vein)
Selected AbstractsGASTRIC FUNDIC VARICES: HEMODYNAMICS AND NON-SURGICAL TREATMENTDIGESTIVE ENDOSCOPY, Issue 3 2005Seishu Hayashi The hemodynamics and non-surgical treatment of gastric fundic varices (FV) are reviewed. FV are more frequently supplied by the short and posterior gastric veins than esophageal varices (EV), and are formed mostly by large spontaneous shunts in which the gastric or splenic vein is continuous with the left renal vein via the inferior phrenic veins and the suprarenal vein (so-called gastric-renal shunt). Concomitant collaterals such as EV, para-esophageal vein, and para-umbilical vein were also observed in nearly 60% of FV. Endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (EIS) with Histoacryl is thought to be the most approved treatment for hemorrhage from FV, but repeated treatment for residual FV and care for ensuing hepatic failure are required. Balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration (B-RTO) is a notable interventional radiological procedure specially developed for the elective or prophylactic treatment of FV. If the procedure is technically successful, long-term eradication of treated FV is found in most patients without recurrence. B-RTO includes another significance, obliteration of the unified portal-systemic shunt. Follow-up abdominal CT scan revealed a high incidence of long-term obliteration of the gastric-renal shunt after B-RTO. Benefits such as elevation of serum albumin, improvement in 15-min retention rate of indocyanine green, decrease in blood ammonia levels, and improvement of encephalopathy are sometimes observed. [source] Inferior Vena Cava Percentage Collapse During Respiration Is Affected by the Sampling Location: An Ultrasound Study in Healthy VolunteersACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 1 2010David J. Wallace MD Abstract Objectives:, Physicians are unable to reliably determine intravascular volume status through the clinical examination. Respiratory variation in the diameter of the inferior vena cava (IVC) has been investigated as a noninvasive marker of intravascular volume status; however, there has been a lack of standardization across investigations. The authors evaluated three locations along the IVC to determine if there is clinical equivalence of the respiratory percent collapse at these sites. The objective of this study was to determine the importance of location when measuring the IVC diameter during quiet respiration. Methods:, Measurements of the IVC were obtained during quiet passive respiration in supine healthy volunteers. All images were recorded in B-mode, with cine-loop adjustments in real time, to ensure that maximum and minimum IVC dimensions were obtained. One-way repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used for comparison of IVC measurement sites. Results:, The mean (±SD) percentage collapse was 20% (±16%) at the level of the diaphragm, 30% (±21%) at the level of the hepatic vein inlet, and 35% (±22%) at the level of the left renal vein. ANOVA revealed a significant overall effect for location of measurement, with F(2,35) = 6.00 and p = 0.006. Contrasts showed that the diaphragm percentage collapse was significantly smaller than the hepatic (F(1,36) = 5.14; p = 0.03) or renal caval index (F(1,36) = 11.85; p = 0.002). Conclusions:, Measurements of respiratory variation in IVC collapse in healthy volunteers are equivalent at the level of the left renal vein and at 2 cm caudal to the hepatic vein inlet. Measurements taken at the junction of the right atrium and IVC are not equivalent to the other sites; clinicians should avoid measuring percentage collapse of the IVC at this location. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:96,99 © 2009 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine [source] A new experimental inbred Wistar rat varicocele model: anatomy of the left spermatic vein and the effect on histologyANDROLOGIA, Issue 1 2008Y. Zhang Summary Because of venous anatomical differences between rats and humans and the personal interpretation of these differences, there is neither consistent animal prototype nor consistent results in the study of varicocele. We established a new substrain of Wistar inbred rats, of which the left testis vein has no significant branches to the common iliac vein up pampiniform plexus, but instead enters the left renal vein directly (similar to humans) and used them to create experimental varicocele model by partial ligation of the left renal vein. One month later, the predominant lesion of the left testis in induced group was spermatogenic arrest at the spermatid and preliminary spermatocyte phases, and considerable interstitial and Sertoli cell vacuolation. The right testis also showed spermatogenic arrest. Most important, the characteristics of the lesions differed in both testes, with the left testis having more severe lesions. Allowing for the unique anatomy of the left spermatic vein, the standard of the surgical procedure, the high rate of varicocele induction, and identical histological alteration as occurs in humans, we believe that this inbred Wistar rat substrain is suitable for the creation of an experimental varicocele model, which has promise for practical application in humans. [source] Congenital absence of the portal vein,Case report and a review of literatureCLINICAL ANATOMY, Issue 7 2010Jana Mistinova Abstract Congenital absence of the portal vein (CAPV) is a rare anomaly in which the intestinal and the splenic venous drainage bypass the liver and drain into systemic veins through various venous shunts. To our knowledge, we have reviewed all 83 cases of CAPV, since first described in 1793. This equates to a rate of almost 2.5 cases per year over the last 30 years. Morgan and Superina (1994, J. Pediatr. Surg. 29:1239,1241) proposed the following classification of portosystemic anomalies; either the liver is not perfused with portal blood because of a complete shunt (Type I) or the liver is perfused with portal blood due to the presence of a partial shunt (Type II). In our case, abdominal venous blood drained into the suprarenal inferior vena cava via the left renal vein and dilated left gastric veins. After analyzing all reported cases, we recognize that more than 65% of patients are females and more than 30% of all published cases had been diagnosed by the age of 5 years. Additional anomalies are common in CAPV. In the reported cases, more then 22% of patients had congenital heart disease. Other commonly found anomalies include abnormalities of the spleen, urinary and male genital tract, brain as well as skeletal anomalies. Hepatic changes such as focal nodular hyperplasia, hepatocellular carcinoma, and hepatoblastoma are diagnosed in more then 40% of patients. This article also illustrates the radiological findings of CAPV. Radiological evaluation by ultrasound, CT, and MRI is helpful to detect coexisting abnormalities. Clin. Anat. 23:750,758, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Pivotal role of the sub-supracardinal anastomosis in the development and course of the left renal veinCLINICAL ANATOMY, Issue 4 2003V. Macchi Abstract A retroaortic left renal vein is encountered frequently in the dissecting room and in radiological investigations. A number of recent reports of this variation led us to review the development of the renal veins and the inferior vena cava to understand its etiology. For further insight, we also examined our collection of serial sections of cat embryos. In human embryos of about 15 mm the "renal collar," a venous ring around the aorta, is formed by anastomoses between subcardinal and supracardinal veins. The ventral part of the "renal collar" is formed from the intersubcardinal anastomosis, the dorsal part from the intersupracardinal anastomosis and the lateral parts from the sub-supracardinal anastomoses. The primitive renal veins drain venous blood from the metanephros into the sub-supracardinal anastomoses. A retroaortic left renal vein would form if the dorsal part of the sub-supracardinal anastomosis and the intersupracardinal anastomosis persist whereas the ventral part of the sub-supracardinal anastomosis and the intersubcardinal anastomosis regress. Clin. Anat. 16:358,361, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Doppler ultrasonographic detection of nutcracker syndrome in a young child with intussusception: A case reportACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 10 2005Jae Il Shin Abstract We report on a 2-y-old male with intussusception accompanying nutcracker syndrome detected by renal Doppler ultrasound. Renal Doppler ultrasound revealed a significant difference in the peak velocity between the hilar and aortomesenteric portions of the left renal vein. Conclusion: Renal Doppler ultrasound has been very useful and effective in detecting nutcracker syndrome in a young child. [source] |