perkután
Perkután (from Latin per- "through" + cutis "skin") is an adjective used in medicine to describe procedures or access routes that are performed through the skin without a large surgical incision. The term corresponds to the English "percutaneous" and is commonly applied to interventions that use needles, catheters or small sheaths to reach internal organs, vessels or spaces.
Common perkután procedures include biopsies, drainage of abscesses, placement of feeding tubes (perkután endosztómiás gastrostomia), nephrolithotomy,
Perkután techniques typically rely on imaging guidance—ultrasound, fluoroscopy, computed tomography or endoscopy—to plan the access route
Risks associated with perkután procedures include bleeding, infection, injury to adjacent structures, device misplacement and the