| Literature DB >> 27807802 |
Satoshi Yamamoto1, Yuriko Yokomizo2, Takafumi Akai2, Takehiro Chiyoda2, Hiroshi Goto2, Yukiyoshi Masaki2.
Abstract
Patients with spinal cord injury experience changes in the cardiovascular system and a high morbidity associated with peripheral artery disease. We report a case of acute aortic occlusion in a patient with chronic paralysis due to spinal cord injury. A 65-year-old man with chronic paralysis due to spinal cord injury developed mottling of the right extremity. Because of the complete tetraplegia, the patient had no subjective symptoms. Computed tomography revealed occlusion of the infrarenal abdominal aorta. An emergency thromboembolectomy established adequate blood flow, and the postoperative course was uneventful. The loss of muscle mass might be an advantage in avoiding ischemia reperfusion syndrome. Early detection of acute aortic occlusion and immediate reperfusion are primarily important, but patients with chronic paralysis present a risk of delay in detection, diagnosis, and treatment of acute aortic occlusion because of motor or sensory deficits. Although rare, it is necessary to consider acute aortic occlusion in the case of acute limb ischemia in patients with chronic paralysis due to spinal cord injury.Entities:
Keywords: Acute aortic occlusion; Limb ischemia; Peripheral artery disease; Spinal cord injury
Year: 2016 PMID: 27807802 PMCID: PMC5093095 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-016-0251-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Photographs of the lower extremities. The patient has muscle atrophy in the bilateral lower extremities (a). Preoperatively, the skin on the right lower extremity appears pale, mottled, and cyanotic, while ischemic changes of the skin on the left side are mild (a). The cyanosis of the right foot disappeared immediately after the thromboembolectomy (b)
Fig. 2Preoperative computed tomography. The abdominal aorta is occluded below the renal arteries (a, arrows; b). The common, external, and internal iliac arteries are occluded bilaterally (a). The infrainguinal vessels were occluded on the right but patent on the left through the collateral vessels (a, c)
Fig. 3Postoperative computed tomography (3 months after surgery). A small thrombus is visible on the left external iliac artery (arrow), but the abdominal aorta and the bilateral common and external iliac arteries are patent. The bilateral internal iliac arteries remain occluded, while the inferior mesenteric artery is patent. The abdominal aorta and the left common iliac artery show calcification, and the right common iliac artery shows dilatation