To report the authors' experience of bronchial artery embolisation (BAE) in a series of patients to control haemoptysis associated with infected pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysms (PAPs). All patients who underwent BAE based on computed tomography angiography (CTA) findings indicative of haemoptysis between February 2019 and September 2022 at Xiangyang Central Hospital were identified. Charts of patients with haemoptysis and infectious PAPs were reviewed retrospectively. Data were collected data on age, sex, underlying pathology, source pulmonary artery of the PAP, association with cavitary lesions or consolidation, systemic angiography findings, technical and clinical success, and follow-up. Seventeen PAPs were treated in 16 patients, with a mean age of 60.3 years (range: 37-82 years). The most common underlying cause was tuberculosis (15/16, 93.8%). Imaging by CTA did not identify the source pulmonary artery for 15 (88.2%) PAPs; all were associated with cavitary lesions or consolidation. All PAPs were visualised on systemic angiography. The technical and clinical success rates were both 87.5%. Two patients who experienced a recurrence of haemoptysis during follow-up underwent repeat CTA, which confirmed the elimination of the previous PAP. BAE may be a valuable technique to control haemoptysis associated with infectious PAPs that are visualised on systemic angiography. A possible contributing factor is PAPs arising from very small pulmonary arteries. Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
X-Q Li, Y-J Wu, J-Z Wang, A Li, Y-L Zheng, X-J Yang. Bronchial embolisation for infected pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysms causing haemoptysis. Clinical radiology. 2024 Jan;79(1):e189-e195
PMID: 37949801
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