RESUMEN
Deep venous thrombosis might present in an acute condition requiring early thrombus removal. Several endovascular and surgical approaches are available with a short treatment time and minimal complications compared to pharmacotherapies. However, due to a lack of evidence, these are not the first treatment choice for deep vein thrombosis. Our case report showed a successful multimodality treatment for an acute-on-chronic massive deep vein thrombosis from the inferior vena cava to the pedal vein. A 47-year-old with chief complaints of cold, significant swelling, and severe pain in her left leg was diagnosed with deep vein thrombosis through Doppler ultrasound and contrast-enhanced computed tomography. The patient received aspiration mechanical thrombectomy with the "kissing catheter" technique, adjunctive stent, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, and open surgical thrombectomy by Fogarty catheter without recurrence and complication.
RESUMEN
Intracranial aneurysms are now treatable with coils, stents, and flow diverters in recent years. For saccular aneurysms with broad necks and short domes, stent-assisted coiling has become a common technique, but over time, the complications-both intraprocedural and in a delayed fashion-occur more frequently than coiling alone. Nonstent or balloon-assisted coiling results in lower aneurysm recanalization, lower aneurysm rupture or re-rupture, or lower aneurysm retreatment. This paper illustrates a successful coiling of wide-neck unruptured aneurysm in the trifurcation of the left P2 posterior cerebral artery done without the assistance of stents or balloons.