Erschienen in:
01.02.2013 | Laboratory Investigation
Irreversible Electroporation Adjacent to the Rectum: Evaluation of Pathological Effects in a Pig Model
verfasst von:
Helmut Schoellnast, Sebastien Monette, Paula C. Ezell, Gordon Single, Majid Maybody, Martin R. Weiser, Yuman Fong, Stephen B. Solomon
Erschienen in:
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology
|
Ausgabe 1/2013
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Abstract
Purpose
To evaluate the effects of irreversible electroporation (IRE) on the rectum wall after IRE applied adjacent to the rectum.
Material and Methods
CT-guided IRE adjacent to the rectum wall was performed in 11 pigs; a total of 44 lesions were created. In five pigs, ablations were performed without a water-filled endorectal coil (group A); in six pigs, ablation was performed with the coil to avoid displacement of the rectum wall (group B). The pigs were killed after 7–15 days and the rectums were harvested for pathological evaluation.
Results
There was no evidence of perforation on gross postmortem examination. Perirectal muscle lesions were observed in 18 of 20 ablations in group A and in 21 of 24 ablations in group B. Inflammation and fibrosis of the muscularis propria was observed in ten of 18 lesions in group A and in ten of 21 lesions in group B. In group A, findings were limited to the external layer of the muscularis propria except for one lesion; in group B, findings were transmural in all cases. Transmural necrosis with marked suppurative mucosal inflammation was observed in seven of 21 lesions in group B and in no lesion in group A.
Conclusion
IRE-ablation adjacent to the rectum may be uneventful if the rectum wall is mobile and able to contract. IRE-ablation of the rectum may be harmful if the rectum wall is fixed adjacent to the IRE-probe.