| Literature DB >> 28377911 |
Duk Sil Kim1, Sung Wan Kim1, Hyun Seok Lee2, Kyung Hwan Byun2, Michael SungPil Choe3.
Abstract
A 39-year-old woman arrived at our emergency department, complaining of severe pain and swelling of her left leg. She had slipped down stairs and injured on her left leg about 3 months ago. Computed tomography angiography showed left distal superficial femoral artery's pseudoaneurysm with arteriovenous fistula and thrombotic occlusion of left common iliac vein. We decided to do endovascular intervention due to severe venous hypertension and chronic inflammation around the fistula. The femoral arteriovenous fistula was closed via stent-graft (7 mm×5, 9 mm×5 cm) deployment. The occluded left iliac vein was reopened by nitinol metal stenting (12 mm×4 cm, 14 mm×4 cm). The authors report a very rare case of femoral arteriovenous fistula combined with iliac vein thrombosis developed after a blunt trauma.Entities:
Keywords: Fistula; Thrombosis; Trauma; blunt
Year: 2017 PMID: 28377911 PMCID: PMC5374959 DOI: 10.5758/vsi.2017.33.1.37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Specialist Int ISSN: 2288-7970
Fig. 1Computed tomography angiography shows (A) left distal femoral artery’s pseudoaneurysm with fistula connection and occlusion of left common iliac vein. (B) Partial thrombus (white arrow) in pseudoaneurysm. (C) Thrombosis in left common iliac vein.
Fig. 2Intra-interventional angiography. (A) Distal femoral arteriovenous fistula was completely closed after two stent-graft (7 mm×5 cm, 9 mm×5 cm) deployments. The pseudoaneurym was partially filled with thrombus (arrow). (B) Thrombotic occlusion of left iliac vein was recanalized via thrombus aspiration and overlapped self-expandable nitinol stents (12 mm×4 cm, 14 mm×4 cm) deployment.
Fig. 3Three year post intervention computed tomography angiography shows patent left femoral artery but somewhat intra-stent restenosis is also observed.