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Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation

Persistent sciatic artery (PSA) is a rare vascular anomaly with estimated incidence of 0.03%–0.06%. It has high incidence of complications including aneurysmal formation and ischaemia that may lead to amputation. During early embryonic development, the sciatic artery (which usually supply fetal lowe...

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Autor principal: Almadani, Hana Kamal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6352791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30700457
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2018-227250
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author Almadani, Hana Kamal
author_facet Almadani, Hana Kamal
author_sort Almadani, Hana Kamal
collection PubMed
description Persistent sciatic artery (PSA) is a rare vascular anomaly with estimated incidence of 0.03%–0.06%. It has high incidence of complications including aneurysmal formation and ischaemia that may lead to amputation. During early embryonic development, the sciatic artery (which usually supply fetal lower buds and caudal part) disappears when the superficial femoral artery develops properly and the lower limbs grow. On clinical examination, usually a pulsating gluteal mass (the aneurysm) is appreciated with weak or absent femoral artery (Cowie’s sign). However, our patient had presented in a different way. She was referred from peripheral clinic as a case of possible liposarcoma in the gluteal region. On examination, there was obvious asymmetry between both buttocks. The affected side was hard, firm in consistency with no appreciable pulsation. Nevertheless, on auscultation there was a bruit of low grade. Peripheral pulses were palpable. Our clinical impression was towards a sarcoma namely a liposarcoma. MRI was requested to evaluate the mass. The radiology report suggested that most probably it is an angiosarcoma with slim possibility of being a cavernous haemangioma. The trucut biopsy was deferred, in view of the high vascular nature of the lesion. The plan was as follow: To do angiography and embolisation of the main feeding vessels, with the possibility of biopsy in a second incident if indicated. During the conventional angiography, the pathology revealed itself. The patient was type 3 according to Pillet-Gauffre classification (PSA is limited to gluteal area and the popliteal artery arising from the femoral artery) associated with huge arteriovenous malformation. Embolisation with different materials including coils, beads and foam was ineffective. Finally, the radiologist excluded the root of the sciatic artery by a stent bridging from common iliac to external iliac artery. This successfully occluded the PSA.
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spelling pubmed-63527912019-02-21 Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation Almadani, Hana Kamal BMJ Case Rep Rare Disease Persistent sciatic artery (PSA) is a rare vascular anomaly with estimated incidence of 0.03%–0.06%. It has high incidence of complications including aneurysmal formation and ischaemia that may lead to amputation. During early embryonic development, the sciatic artery (which usually supply fetal lower buds and caudal part) disappears when the superficial femoral artery develops properly and the lower limbs grow. On clinical examination, usually a pulsating gluteal mass (the aneurysm) is appreciated with weak or absent femoral artery (Cowie’s sign). However, our patient had presented in a different way. She was referred from peripheral clinic as a case of possible liposarcoma in the gluteal region. On examination, there was obvious asymmetry between both buttocks. The affected side was hard, firm in consistency with no appreciable pulsation. Nevertheless, on auscultation there was a bruit of low grade. Peripheral pulses were palpable. Our clinical impression was towards a sarcoma namely a liposarcoma. MRI was requested to evaluate the mass. The radiology report suggested that most probably it is an angiosarcoma with slim possibility of being a cavernous haemangioma. The trucut biopsy was deferred, in view of the high vascular nature of the lesion. The plan was as follow: To do angiography and embolisation of the main feeding vessels, with the possibility of biopsy in a second incident if indicated. During the conventional angiography, the pathology revealed itself. The patient was type 3 according to Pillet-Gauffre classification (PSA is limited to gluteal area and the popliteal artery arising from the femoral artery) associated with huge arteriovenous malformation. Embolisation with different materials including coils, beads and foam was ineffective. Finally, the radiologist excluded the root of the sciatic artery by a stent bridging from common iliac to external iliac artery. This successfully occluded the PSA. BMJ Publishing Group 2019-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC6352791/ /pubmed/30700457 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2018-227250 Text en © BMJ Publishing Group Limited 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Rare Disease
Almadani, Hana Kamal
Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title_full Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title_fullStr Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title_full_unstemmed Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title_short Persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
title_sort persistent sciatic artery resembles a soft-tissue sarcoma in presentation
topic Rare Disease
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6352791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30700457
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2018-227250
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