Measurement of hepatic venous pressure gradient revisited: Catheter wedge vs balloon wedge techniques

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Abstract

Aims: To evaluate the accuracy of measurement of hepatic venous pressure gradient by catheter wedge as compared to balloon wedge (the gold standard). Materials and Methods: Forty-five patients having a clinical diagnosis of intrahepatic portal hypertension were subjected to the two different types of pressure measurements (catheter wedge and balloon wedge) during transjugular liver biopsy under fluoroscopic guidance. Statistical Analysis: Spearman's rank correlation coefficient, Bland-Altman plot for agreement, and single measure intraclass correlation were used for analysis of data. Results: There was a close correlation between the results obtained by both the techniques, with highly significant concordance (P < 0.0001). Hepatic venous pressure gradients as measured by the catheter wedge technique were either equal to or less than those obtained by the balloon wedge technique. Conclusions: The difference in hepatic venous pressure gradients measured by the two techniques is insignificant.

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Chelliah, S., Keshava, S., Moses, V., Surendrababu, N., Zachariah, U., & Eapen, C. (2011). Measurement of hepatic venous pressure gradient revisited: Catheter wedge vs balloon wedge techniques. Indian Journal of Radiology and Imaging, 21(4), 291–293. https://doi.org/10.4103/0971-3026.90693

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