| Literature DB >> 28050619 |
Ran Zhao1, Yang Li1, Yanqing Liu2,3, Ke Zhang1, Zhongjun Liu1.
Abstract
Arterial complications following total knee arthroplasty are rare but carry a high risk of significant morbidity and mortality. Herein, the authors report a case of pseudoaneurysm in a branch of a high-division anterior tibial artery caused by laceration by the retractor following primary total knee arthroplasty in a 72-year-old woman. The patient presented with an unexplained hematoma and an enlarging swelling, with pallor and acute hemorrhage on the first postoperative day. The diagnosis was confirmed by arteriography and the patient was successfully treated using endovascular embolization without long-term complications. Because of the high risk of progression to a potentially limb- or life-threatening condition, it is important to discuss the risk factors for this complication, as well as its early diagnosis and treatment methods.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior tibial artery; Embolism; Hematoma; Risk factors; Thrombosis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28050619 PMCID: PMC5346123 DOI: 10.1007/s00132-016-3373-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthopade ISSN: 0085-4530 Impact factor: 1.087
Fig. 1a An unexplained hematoma and an enlarging swelling developed on the left knee on the first postoperative day. b Urgent angiography showed a pseudoaneurysm arising from a branch of the anterior tibial artery, which is a high division of the popliteal artery above the knee joint. c, d The pseudoaneurysm was treated with microcoil embolization
Fig. 2a A suspected high-division anterior tibial artery (ATA) moved up the branch vessel position. The mechanism of vascular injury was laceration of a branch of the high-division ATA along the subperiosteum by the point of the retractor during retraction of the lateral soft tissue, as shown in (b). This may have occurred if the retractor was inserted too deeply or at an incorrect angle