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[Imaging of visceral vessels].

Der Internist 2017 August
Visceral vessel processes are primarily or secondarily included in a multitude of clinical abdominal symptoms, with which the specialist in internal medicine is confronted. The spectrum ranges from more sharply outlined manifestations, such as chronic ischemic bowel disease up to dysfunctional disturbances of blood pressure regulation, such as high-grade renal artery stenosis. Sometimes diseases with prognostic implications, such as arterial aneurysms, are revealed as incidental findings. As a rule the B‑mode and duplex ultrasound can often be complemented by computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as in aneurysms or portal vein thrombosis or the indications for subsequent digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and catheter-based therapy can be directly obtained from duplex and Doppler ultrasound. The present review article focuses on the use of these methods in the most important diseases, with the exception of acute abdomen because this requires further detailed etiological and diagnostic systematization.

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