Hemorrhoidal Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility of Superior Rectal Artery Embolization for the Treatment of Hemorrhoidal Disease
With an estimated prevalence between 4 and 35%, the hemorrhoidal disease is the most frequent
proctologic disease. Its symptoms are mainly rectorrhagia, externalization of the
hemorrhoidal cushions (muco-hemorrhoidal prolapse), and/or pain and pruritus. Its acute
complications (external and/or internal thromboses) are unpredictable.
Surgical treatment concerns approximately 10% of patients with diagnosed hemorrhoidal
pathologies. The elective ligature of the arteria haemorrhoidalis under trans-anal Doppler
scanning was developed in order to reduce the postoperative morbidity of hemorrhoidal
surgery. This technique consists in a ligation of the superior rectal artery under Doppler
control in order to decrease the blood flow within the hemorrhoids and therefore to reduce
them. It is effective in the treatment of internal hemorrhoidal pathology without prolapse
(grade II). The complications rate is low and estimated between 2 and 12% : rectorrhagia
(4.3%), thrombosed hemorrhoids (1,8%), fissure (0,8%), acute urine retention (0,7%).
With the major advances in interventional radiology such ligation could be performed by an
endovascular coil embolization. Until now no direct study exists on the subject but several
case reports show the feasibility of an embolization of the superior rectal arteries for
rectorrhagia of various etiologies such as the hemorrhoidal disease.
Endovascular access should increase the selectivity of the embolization compared to the
Doppler scanning technique. Indeed the arteriography makes it possible to scan all branches
of the superior rectal artery and therefore to occlude permanently the branches that feed the
hemorrhoidal plexuses. Moreover the endovascular embolization technique should avoid the main
complications of the trans-anal access technique.
The primary objective of this study is : the assessment of the efficacy of endovascular coil
embolization of the superior rectal arteries in the management of the symptoms of the
hemorrhoidal disease grade II and III. The secondary objective is : the assessment of
postoperative complications.
n/a
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