Annals of translational medicine | 2021

CT-US fusion imaging increases the feasibility of early ultrasound-guided percutaneous intervention of local drug therapy in pancreatic contusion and laceration.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background\nMultimodal fusion imaging (MMFI) was usually used to assist percutaneous procedures for difficult lesions, with most applications occurring with hepatic and prostatic interventions. This paper aimed to evaluate the precision and effectiveness of computed tomography-ultrasound (CT-US) fusion imaging (CUFI)-assisted US-guided percutaneous intervention (UGPI) in early local drug therapy for pancreatic contusion and laceration (PCL).\n\n\nMethods\nA total of 12 pigs with PCL were randomly divided into a CUFI-assisted UGPI (MU) group (n=6) and a single UGPI (SU) group (n=6). The MU group underwent CUFI-assisted UGPI of locally applied medical protein glue (1 mL) injection while the SU group received the same therapy using two-dimensional UGPI. The duration and accuracy of each procedure were observed in the 2 groups.\n\n\nResults\nIn the MU group, the overall time of the procedure for locking the plane was 1.85±0.06 minutes. Less time was spent in the selection of the pathway and puncture site in the MU group compared with the SU group (6.56±0.42 vs. 7.61±0.44 minutes, P<0.01). The duration of puncturing and drug injection was also shorter in the MU group than in the SU group (3.41±0.30 vs. 4.20±0.20 minutes, P<0.01) and the MU group had a higher accuracy of medical protein glue injection than the SU group (100% vs. 50%, P<0.05).\n\n\nConclusions\nCUFI could increase the precision and effectiveness of early UGPI in the delivery of local drug therapy in PCL.

Volume 9 4
Pages \n 307\n
DOI 10.21037/atm-20-4426
Language English
Journal Annals of translational medicine

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