Authors
- Khawaja B. Waheed, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Hassan R. Mohammed, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Khaled S. Salem, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Mohamed A. Shaltout, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Ali S. Alshehri, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Emad F. Said, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Abdulhadi S. Almubarak, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Zechariah J. Arulanantham, From the Department of Radiology (Waheed, Salem, Alshehri, Said, Almubarak); from the Department of Vascular Surgery (Mohammed, Shaltout), King Fahad Military Medical Complex, and from the Vice Deanship of Post-graduate and Research (Arulanantham), Prince Sultan Military College of Health Science, Dhahran, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Abstract
Objectives: To determine the prevalence of May-Thurner syndrome (MTS) in left lower limb deep venous thrombosis (DVT) cases and to analyze the outcome of endovascular intervention in these patients. Methods: A record-based descriptive study was carried out in Radiology Department, King Fahad Military Medical Complex, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, including patients who underwent lower limb duplex ultrasounds between January 2015-2021. Patients with bilateral DVTs, known pelvic masses, and pelvic surgeries were excluded. All patients positive for DVTs were identified and further imaging was reviewed. Left common iliac vein compression of 50% or more on computed tomography (CT) was considered positive for MTS. Endovascular interventions (venoplasty alone or with stenting) were evaluated and success recorded by observing patency of vein on follow-up imaging or improvement of symptoms on follow-up visits. Results: Of 182 patients with left lower limb duplex studies, 51 patients were positive for DVTs. A total of 37 patients had CTs and 21 patients had MTS (17 females, 3 males). A total of 15 patients underwent endovascular interventions, 2 patients had venoplasties alone (one successful) and 13 patients had venoplasties with stenting (10 successful). Conclusion: Patients with MTS as cause of DVT may benefit from early endovascular intervention.
Article Type
Brief Communication
Recommended Citation
Waheed, Khawaja B.; Mohammed, Hassan R.; Salem, Khaled S.; Shaltout, Mohamed A.; Alshehri, Ali S.; Said, Emad F.; Almubarak, Abdulhadi S.; and Arulanantham, Zechariah J.
(2022)
"Left lower limb deep venous thrombosis, May-Thurner syndrome and endovascular management,"
Saudi Medical Journal: Vol. 43:
Iss.
1, Article 14.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15537/smj.2022.43.1.20210473
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