| Literature DB >> 26911721 |
Yousof Al Zahrani1, David Peck2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Iatrogenic arterial injury during bone marrow biopsy is an extremely rare complication. We present unreported complication of median sacral artery injury that was managed successfully with endovascular treatment. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26911721 PMCID: PMC4766635 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-0827-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Author, patient’s age, bleeding artery, treatment, and outcome of patients with arterial injury following bone marrow biopsy published in the medical literature
| Author | Age(years) gender | Bleeding artery | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arellano-Rodrigo | 41 male | Circumflex iliac artery | Transcatheter embolization | Completely recovered |
| Luoni | 74 female | Iliolumbar artery | Surgery | Completely recovered |
| Ilhami | 76 male | Superior gluteal artery | Transcatheter embolization | Completely recovered |
| Chamisa [ | 29 male | Superior gluteal artery | Transcatheter embolization | Died |
| Sullivan | 55 male | Superior gluteal artery | Transcatheter embolization | Completely recovered |
| Neese | 67 female | Anterior hypogastric artery | None | Completely recovered |
Fig. 1a Axial contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan showing a large heterogeneous retroperitoneal/pre-sacral hematoma with active extravasation (arrow). b Sagittal contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan showing the origin of the median sacral artery from the distal abdominal aorta (arrow)
Fig. 2a Pelvic angiogram showing the origin of the median sacral artery (arrow). b Lateral angiogram image showing the tip of the reverse curve angiographic catheter within the origin of the median sacral artery. c Lateral superselective angiogram of the median sacral artery while using the micro-catheter, showing active bleeding (arrow). d Lateral angiogram showing multiple micro-coils successfully deployed within the median sacral artery