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. 1984 Mar;119(3):278-81.
doi: 10.1001/archsurg.1984.01390150020005.

Treatment of renal artery embolism

Treatment of renal artery embolism

G G Nicholas et al. Arch Surg. 1984 Mar.

Abstract

Renal artery embolectomy was performed on four patients. There was no operative mortality. Four of the five affected kidneys were salvaged. The most common initial symptom was flank pain. The literature from 1970 to 1982 was reviewed to determine the current operative mortality (11%) and frequency of kidney salvage (67% to 90%) with surgery or anticoagulation. Newer treatment modalities, including intraarterially injected low-dose streptokinase and percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, have also proved useful. The addition of these newer methods, combined with the fact that kidneys can frequently be salvaged after prolonged periods of acute renal artery occlusion, led to the development of a clinical algorithm for treatment. With this algorithm, surgical embolectomy was reserved for patients with total renal parenchymal compromise caused by emboli, whose conditions failed to respond to less invasive treatment modes.

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