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Dive into the research topics where Steven M. Zangan is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven M. Zangan.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2009

Techniques Used for Difficult Retrievals of the Günther Tulip Inferior Vena Cava Filter: Experience in 32 Patients

Thuong G. Van Ha; Olga Vinokur; Jonathan M. Lorenz; Sidney Regalado; Steven M. Zangan; Giancarlo Piano; Brian Funaki

PURPOSE To retrospectively review experience with difficult retrievals of Günther Tulip filters (GTFs) in which various techniques were used. MATERIALS AND METHODS From December 2004 to December 2006, 32 patients were referred to a single radiology department for GTF retrieval (25 women and seven men; mean age, 40 years; range, 21-60 y). All patients were evaluated, and 22 of these patients had undergone unsuccessful filter retrieval attempts elsewhere. In the remaining patients, significant tilt of the filter (n = 8) or difficult internal jugular vein access (n = 2) discouraged retrieval attempts. There were a total of 38 filters. Twenty-five patients had a filter in the infrarenal inferior vena cava (IVC). Among the remaining seven patients, six had bilateral iliac filters and one had a left iliac filter. Retrievals were performed via conventional technique-ie, by snaring the hook of the filter without additional maneuvers-or other techniques. RESULTS Thirty-seven of 38 filters were successfully removed, for a success rate of 97%. Successful retrievals were performed with conventional (n = 4), catheter twist (n = 3), modified snare (n = 15), loop snare (n = 14), and balloon dilation (n = 1) techniques. The average dwell time for filters successfully removed was 58 days (range, 22-258 d). One failure occurred in a patient who had undergone unsuccessful retrieval previously. The hook of the filter and a displaced secondary strut, which had migrated superiorly, were incorporated into the IVC wall in this case. CONCLUSIONS Additional maneuvers were useful in these difficult retrievals of GTFs that might not otherwise be retrievable with the conventional method.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2012

Evaluation and Treatment of Suspected Type II Endoleaks in Patients with Enlarging Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms

Brian Funaki; Nour Birouti; Steven M. Zangan; Thuong G. Van Ha; Jonathan M. Lorenz; Rakesh Navuluri; Christopher L. Skelly; Jeffrey A. Leef

PURPOSE To evaluate angiographic diagnosis and embolotherapy of patients with enlarging abdominal aortic aneurysms and computed tomographic (CT) diagnosis of type II endoleak. MATERIALS AND METHODS A retrospective review was performed of all patients referred to a single vascular and interventional radiology section from January 1, 2003, to June 1, 2011, with a diagnosis of enlarging aneurysm and type II endoleak. Twenty-five patients underwent 40 procedures between 12 and 82 months after endograft insertion (mean, 48 mo) for diagnosis and/or treatment of endoleaks. RESULTS Type II endoleaks were treated with cyanoacrylate, coils, and ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer in 16 patients. Technical success rate was 88% (14 of 16 patients) and clinical success rate was 100% (16 of 16 patients). Aneurysm growth was arrested in all cases over a mean follow-up of 27.5 months (range, 6-88 mo). Endoleaks in nine patients were misclassified on CT; two had type I endoleaks and seven had type III endoleaks. Four of the nine patients (two type I endoleaks and two type III endoleaks) were correctly classified after initial angiography. The other five type III endoleaks were correctly classified on CT after coil embolization of the inferior mesenteric artery. Direct embolization was performed via sac puncture with ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer in two of the latter five patients and eliminated endoleaks in both. CONCLUSIONS Aneurysm growth caused by type II endoleaks was arrested by embolization. CT misclassification occurred relatively commonly; type III endoleaks purported to be type II endoleaks were found in 28% of patients (seven of 25).


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2015

Strut Penetration: Local Complications, Breakthrough Pulmonary Embolism, and Retrieval Failure in Patients with Celect Vena Cava Filters

Aaron Bos; Thuong G. Van Ha; Darren van Beek; Michael Ginsburg; Steven M. Zangan; Rakesh Navuluri; Jonathan M. Lorenz; Brian Funaki

PURPOSE To investigate strut penetration in patients with Celect filters, specifically local complications and association with breakthrough pulmonary embolism (PE) or retrieval failure. MATERIALS AND METHODS A retrospective single-center study was conducted to evaluate patients who received Celect filters between January 2007 and May 2013. A total of 595 filters were placed during the study period. Primary indications included thromboembolic disease (93%) and primary surgical prophylaxis (7%). Complications and retrieval data were assessed by computed tomography (CT) and electronic medical records. RESULTS A total of 193 patients underwent follow-up abdominal CT at a mean follow-up interval of 176.2 days (range, 0-1,739 d). The rate of strut penetration more than 3 mm outside the caval wall was 28.5% (n = 55). One patient had CT evidence of clinically major strut penetration (1.8%) with strut compression of the right ureter causing hydronephrosis. Indwelling filter time longer than 100 days was associated with strut penetration (P < .001). Age, sex, and history of thromboembolic disease were not associated with strut penetration (P = .51, P = .81, and P = .89). Sixty-three patients presented for follow-up CT pulmonary angiography at a mean of 128.1 days (range, 1-895 d). The rate of breakthrough PE was 12.7%. The overall retrieval success rate was 96.7% (n = 150). Strut penetration was not associated with breakthrough PE or retrieval failure (P = .49 and P = .22). CONCLUSIONS Although strut penetration is a common complication with Celect filters, there is no association with breakthrough PE or retrieval failure. CT evidence of local complications associated with strut penetration is rare.


Seminars in Interventional Radiology | 2009

Optimizing Arteriovenous Fistula Maturation

Steven M. Zangan; Abigail Falk

Autogenous arteriovenous fistulas are the preferred vascular access in patients undergoing hemodialysis. Increasing fistula prevalence depends on increasing fistula placement, improving the maturation of fistula that fail to mature and enhancing the long-term patency of mature fistula. Percutaneous methods for optimizing arteriovenous fistula maturation will be reviewed.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2014

Clinical Predictors of Port Infections within the First 30 Days of Placement

Ravinder Bamba; Jonathan M. Lorenz; Allison Lale; Brian Funaki; Steven M. Zangan

PURPOSE To identify risk factors for port infections within 30 days of placement. MATERIAL AND METHODS A retrospective chart review of port placements from 2002-2009 was conducted. Patients who had port removals secondary to infection within the first 30 days of placement were included. This group of patients was compared with a control group of patients with ports with no evidence of infection. For every one patient with a port infection, two control subjects were chosen of the same gender and new port placement during the same month as the corresponding patient with an infected port. RESULTS From 2002-2009, 4,404 ports were placed. Of the 4,404 patients, 33 (0.7%) were found to have a port infection within 30 days of placement. Compared with the control group, the early infection group had a higher prevalence of leukopenia (21.2% vs 6.1%, P = .039) and thrombocytopenia (33% vs 12%, P = .0158). There was also a higher prevalence of an inpatient hospital stay during port placement and high international normalized ratio in the early infection group. CONCLUSIONS Low preoperative white blood cell and platelet counts were risk factors for early infection. Abnormal coagulation profiles and inpatient access of ports after placement could be additional risk factors.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010

Iatrogenic Portobiliary Fistula Treated by Stent-Graft Placement

Jonathan M. Lorenz; Steven M. Zangan; Jeffrey A. Leef; Thuong G. Van Ha

Stent-graft exclusion of an ischemic, hilar portobiliary fistula after liver transplantation has not been reported. Isolated reports have described peripheral or nonischemic fistulas, and alternative treatment options have ranged from balloon tamponade to surgical repair. We present a unique case of a hilar portobiliary fistula successfully treated to resolution by unilateral placement of a stent-graft.


Journal of Vascular Access | 2007

Percutaneous placement of a constrained stent for the treatment of dialysis associated arteriovenous graft steal syndrome

Steven M. Zangan; T.G. Van Ha

Though rare, dialysis associated steal syndrome (DASS) can cause debilitating symptoms. Surgical revision of the dialysis access is typically required. We describe a percutaneous technique to alleviate steal syndrome utilizing a constrained stent within an arteriovenous graft. A brief review of the incidence, pathophysiology, and standard treatment of DASS is also provided.


Pediatric Radiology | 2004

Occlusive intraluminal hematoma

Steven M. Zangan; David K. Yousefzedah

We report an unusual case of a 10-month-old girl who developed partial small-bowel obstruction caused by an intraluminal hematoma within the terminal ileum. Passage of bright red blood through her rectum prompted radiologic evaluation with computed tomography, barium enema, and ultrasound. These revealed an avascular right lower-quadrant mass within the lumen of the terminal ileum. An exploratory laparotomy was performed, and a large obstructing hematoma was removed.


Seminars in Interventional Radiology | 2015

Percutaneous Transhepatic Biliary Drainage Complicated by Bilothorax

Stephanie H. Kim; Steven M. Zangan

Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) is a well-established and safe technique for the management of biliary obstructions and leaks. While approach is variable based on operator preference, patient anatomy, and indications; PTBD is commonly performed via a right-sided intercostal route. With a right-sided approach, pleural complications may be encountered. The authors describe a case of a right PTBD complicated by a leak into the pleural space, with the subsequent development of bilothorax.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2014

Comparison of Barbed versus Conventional Sutures for Wound Closure of Radiologically Implanted Chest Ports

Osman Ahmed; Danial Jilani; Brian Funaki; Michael Ginsburg; Sujay Sheth; Maryellen L. Giger; Steven M. Zangan

PURPOSE To retrospectively compare the incidences of complications with barbed suture versus conventional interrupted suture for incision closure in implantable chest ports. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 715 power-injectable dual-lumen chest ports placed between 2011 and 2013 were studied. Primary outcomes included wound dehiscence, local port infection, local infections treated by wound packing, early infections within 30 days, and total infections. A multivariate analysis of independent risk factors for port infection was also performed. RESULTS A total of 442 ports were closed with nonbarbed suture, versus 273 closed with barbed suture. Mean catheter-days in the traditional and barbed groups were 257.9 (range, 3-722) and 189.1 (range, 13-747), respectively (P < .01). The rate of dehiscence with traditional suture (1.6%; seven of 442) was significantly higher than that with barbed suture (zero of 273; P = .04). Percentage of total infections was also significantly higher with traditional suture (9.5% vs 5.1%; P = .03). No difference in rate of infection per 1,000 catheter-days was seen between traditional and barbed suture groups (0.0035 vs 0.0026; P = .17). The rate of local infection with traditional suture was significantly higher (2.7% vs 0.4%; P = .02). Additionally, multivariate analysis identified the use of traditional suture as the only independent risk factor for infection (39% vs 25%; P = .03). CONCLUSIONS Barbed suture for incision closure in implantable dual-lumen chest ports was associated with lower rates of dehiscence and potentially lower rates of local infectious complications compared with traditional nonbarbed suture.

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Osman Ahmed

Rush University Medical Center

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T. Van Ha

University of Chicago

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Aaron Bos

University of Chicago

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