Delayed angioplasty after renal thrombosis Laurent Mesnard, MD, Michel Delahousse, MD, Alain Raynaud, MD, Gilles de Tovar, MD, Myriam Pastural, MD, Michel Chaignon, MD, Philippe Aubert, MD, Jean-Philippe Haymann, MD, PhD American Journal of Kidney Diseases Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages e20.1-e20.4 (June 2003) DOI: 10.1016/S0272-6386(03)00366-4 Copyright © 2003 Terms and Conditions
Fig 1 Doppler signal shows a persistent renal flow in the left renal vein (despite no detected renal arterial flow). American Journal of Kidney Diseases 2003 41, e20.1-e20.4DOI: (10.1016/S0272-6386(03)00366-4) Copyright © 2003 Terms and Conditions
Fig 2 (A) Aortogram shows total left renal artery occlusion and the presence of collateral vessels. A delayed opacification of the distal part of the right kidney artery is seen driven by a collateral vascularization with a complete thrombosis of the proximal artery (arrow). The complete occlusion of both proximal kidney arteries was confirmed by selective catheterization (data not shown). (B) Final result after bilateral angioplasty shows repermeabilization. American Journal of Kidney Diseases 2003 41, e20.1-e20.4DOI: (10.1016/S0272-6386(03)00366-4) Copyright © 2003 Terms and Conditions