https://www.selleckchem.com/EGFR(HER).html The absence of typical symptoms and known precipitating factors can made the diagnosis quite hard to achieve.Given the rarity of splenic vein aneurysms, it is no surprise that there are little data to help guide clinicians regarding indications and techniques for repair. Traditionally associated with hepatobiliary pathology including portal hypertension and pancreatitis, management typically involved open splenectomy. We describe the case of a patient with an incidentally found enlarging splenic vein aneurysm in the absence of significant past medical history. The patient underwent successful repair of the aneurysm utilizing a transhepatic endovascular approach with a balloon expandable stent. We offer this as minimally invasive solution allowing splenic salvage.We report the case of a 72-year-old man who presented with a left ruptured internal iliac aneurysm (IIA). A percutaneous cross-over approach was used to coil-embolize the 3 distal branches of the IIA. A tapered endograft limb was then delivered via the right common femoral artery using a femorofemoral through-and-through cross-over approach. The widest part of the graft was deployed in the common iliac artery and the smallest in the external iliac artery. This percutaneous endovascular technique opens up new perspectives in emergency care for ruptured internal iliac artery aneurysms.In this study, we report a case of a 45-year-old man with dysphagia aortica secondary to chronic traumatic aortic pseudoaneurysm of the aortic isthmus. He had been involved in a motor vehicle accident 27 years earlier. Computed tomography demonstrated a severely calcified aortic pseudoaneurysm of the aortic isthmus that compressed the esophagus extrinsically. An invasive surgical procedure involving a graft replacement and removal of the calcified aortic wall released the esophageal compression and completely improved the patient's symptoms. To the best of our knowledge, a case of dyspha