Carl A. Narducci's scientific contributions
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Publication (1)
Angiography with selective embolization has become an accepted method of treating posterior epistaxis that is not controlled with conservative measures. The authors reviewed 112 cases of patients who had received selective angiographic embolization for refractory epistaxis from January 1990 to December 1995. There were 114 embolizations over this 5...
Citations
... [11][12][13] Examples include tissue necrosis of the face or palate, stroke, hemiplegia, and blindness with the latter complications possibly due to retrograde embolic migration. [14][15][16] Minor complications occur far more often and consist of facial pain, headaches, confusion, paresthesia, facial edema, and numbness. 14 Permanent side effects of embolization are seldom reported with most complications resolving in less than a week. ...