Aisyah Amalia
Radiology Resident of Radiology Specialist Study Program, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Brawijaya/ Dr. Saiful Anwar Hospital, Malang, East Java, Indonesia

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Transarterial Embolisation for Intractable Haematuria: A Case Report and Review of Management Strategies Aisyah Amalia; Achmad Bayhaqi Nasir Aslam; Farah Nurdiana; Siswidiyati
Asian Journal of Health Research Vol. 4 No. 3 (2025): Volume 4 No 3 (December) 2025
Publisher : Ikatan Dokter Indonesia Wilayah Jawa Timur

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.55561/ajhr.v4i3.286

Abstract

Introduction: Refractory gross haematuria is a significant urological emergency, characterised by prolonged and life-threatening bleeding that does not respond to standard treatment. The main recognised aetiologies encompass malignant neoplasms of the bladder and haemorrhagic cystitis. When conservative treatments and intravesical medications fail, transarterial embolisation (TAE) is a dependable and effective technique for achieving haemostasis. This study aims to report cases of haematuria resulting from bladder pathology, the role of interventional radiology in embolisation, and technical considerations. Case Presentation: We present two cases of refractory gross haematuria from the bladder managed with TAE. Case 1 involved a 65-year-old male with locally advanced, hypervascularised bladder squamous cell carcinoma (cT4aN3M1b). Case 2 involved a 69-year-old woman with haemorrhagic cystitis secondary to pelvic radiotherapy for stage IVb cervical carcinoma. Pre-embolisation angiography showed prominent blushing of feeder arteries arising from the superior vesical artery (SVA) bilaterally. Embolisation used gelfoam and PVA particles. The procedure reduces tumour blushing (Case 1) and hypervascularisation (Case 2), controlling haematuria. Conclusion: TAE is a safe and effective treatment modality for managing persistent gross haematuria due to diverse bladder pathologies, including bladder malignancy and radiation cystitis. Bilateral vesical artery embolisation was performed in both cases to ensure a more sustained response and reduce the likelihood of recurrence.
Diagnostic and Planning Value of T2-Weighted and Flair MRI for Radiotherapy Target Contouring in Brain Tumors Rafiq Sulistyo Nugroho; Fadlan Adima Adrianta; Suaydiy Okdiyanzah; Sakena Nurza; Aisyah Amalia
Asian Journal of Health Research Vol. 5 No. 1 (2026): Volume 5 No 1 (April) 2026
Publisher : Ikatan Dokter Indonesia Wilayah Jawa Timur

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.55561/ajhr.v5i1.304

Abstract

Introduction: Brain and central nervous system tumors, particularly gliomas, represent a growing global burden with poor prognosis. Radiotherapy post–maximal resection is central to management, yet its success depends on precise target delineation to preserve healthy tissue. MRI, especially T2-weighted and FLAIR sequences, is standard for planning, but the optimal sequence remains unclear.    Material and Methods: A systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. Literature searches were performed in PubMed, ScienceDirect, and EuropePMC databases up to 25 May 2025. Observational or comparative studies assessing T2-weighted and/or FLAIR MRI for radiotherapy target contouring were included. Study selection, data extraction, and quality assessment using ROBINS-I were independently performed by two reviewers.    Results: From 246 identified studies, four studies met the inclusion criteria. Overall, FLAIR-based delineation consistently produced larger clinical and planning target volumes compared with T2-weighted imaging, capturing additional regions of peritumoral abnormality. Recurrence pattern analyses suggested that FLAIR-defined volumes may better encompass infiltrative tumor margins. High interobserver agreement was reported for MRI-based target delineation, supporting the feasibility of MRI-only workflows, although selective CT integration remained important for certain organs at risk.    Conclusion: Although the evidence is limited, both T2-weighted and FLAIR MRI sequences play an important role in brain tumor radiotherapy planning. While T2-weighted imaging generates more conservative target volumes, FLAIR sequences better capture infiltrative edema, potentially lowering recurrence risks at the cost of increased healthy tissue irradiation. Careful, consensus-driven sequences selection is required to balance tumor coverage and normal tissue sparing.