| Literature DB >> 24891863 |
Hee-Kwon Park1, Woo Jin Choe1, Young-Cho Koh1, Sang Woo Park2.
Abstract
Great vessel injury is a rare but well-known complication of lumbar disc surgery, which may result in acute or fatal outcomes of delayed diagnosis. Thus, early detection and proper management is vital. The authors report a case of retroperitoneal hemorrhage with arteriovenous fistula and pseudoaneurysm after lumbar microdiscectomy. The patient was successfully managed by endovascular intervention using a stent graft. Endovascular repair is a minimally invasive and efficient treatment modality with considerably low morbidity and mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Lumbar disc surgery; Vascular injury
Year: 2013 PMID: 24891863 PMCID: PMC4040641 DOI: 10.14245/kjs.2013.10.4.264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Spine ISSN: 1738-2262
Fig. 1Postoperative radiographs show blurring of the right psoas shadow(arrowheads). Hemoglobin levels dropped from 13.5 g/dL to 8.5 g/dL postoperatively without any clinical manifestations.
Fig. 2Emergent enhanced abdominal computed tomography scans reveal a retroperitoneal hematoma (arrowheads). A pseudoaneurysm(arrow) between the common iliac artery and iliac vein is seen in front of the L4-5 intervertebral disc space.
Fig. 3Angiography demonstrates the formation of an arteriovenous fistula between the right common iliac artery and right common iliac vein with a pseudoaneurysm(black arrow).
Fig. 4The fistula was obliterated using a stent graft and a balloon at the right common iliac artery. Only arterial side laceration was obliterated, and fistula with pseudoaneurysm was not visible on angiography. Vascular bleeding was stopped via tamponade effect of the hematoma.
Fig. 5Computed tomography obtained three months after stent graft insertion shows absorption of retroperitoneal hemorrhage and well maintained blood flow thorough the right iliac artery. The arteriovenous fistula with pseudoaneurysm is not observed.