Erschienen in:
01.03.2013 | Interventional
Characteristics of vascular supply to uterine leiomyoma: an analysis of digital subtraction angiography imaging in 518 cases
verfasst von:
Chun-Lin Chen, Yu-Jing Xu, Ping Liu, Jiang-Hong Zhu, Ben Ma, Bei-Lan Zeng, Yan Zhou, Li Wang, Yi-Xin Tang, Chuan-Jia Guo
Erschienen in:
European Radiology
|
Ausgabe 3/2013
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Abstract
Objectives
To investigate the characteristics of the vascular supply to uterine leiomyomas based on digital subtraction angiography.
Methods
The feeding artery, vascularity of uterine leiomyoma and visualisation of the ovarian vessel network were studied in 518 patients undergoing uterine artery embolisation (UAE). Mean patient age was 38.97 ± 6.09 years (range, 22–54 years). The types of vascular supply were analysed by the vascular supply to the leimyoma and grades of vascularity by the degree of enhancement of the leimyoma compared with the myometrium.
Results
The blood supply of leiomyomas could not be classified in 3.28 % of patients. Blood was supplied solely by the uterine artery in 88.61 % of leiomyomas, 8.11 % of leiomyomas were partially fed by an ovarian artery, and 0.39 % by it exclusively. Leiomyoma blood supply was classified as unilateral predominant, bilateral balanced, single unilateral uterine artery and single ovarian artery in 36.48, 49.23, 10.62 and 0.39 % of cases respectively. Leiomyoma vascularity was classified as extremely hypervascular (8.69 %), hypervascular (46.14 %), isovascular (33.39 %) and hypovascular (11.78 %).
Conclusions
Uterine leiomyomas supplied by both uterine arteries and with rich blood flow were seen in approximately 50 % of patients. However, close attention also should be given to the collateral circulation during UAE.
Key Points
• The vascularity of uterine leiomyomata was studied by digital subtraction angiography.
• Most uterine leiomyomtas have a bilateral uterine artery blood supply.
• Attention should be given to collateral circulation during embolisation procedures.