| Literature DB >> 30627253 |
Piotr Pasecki1, Jerzy Narloch1, Konrad Tkaczewski2, Wojciech Wasek2, Piotr Ziecina1, Krzysztof Brzozowski1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Interventional cardiology and interventional radiology are separate medical disciplines in which intra-arterial contrast media are used. Interventional cardiology has resigned from many types of treatment techniques that are now used and developed in the field of interventional radiology. In the event of iatrogenic bleeding during coronary interventions, there is an urgent need to use safe and efficient rescue procedures that are as efficient as cardiosurgery but use simpler treatment options. Serious perforations require immediate endovascular interventions. Medical history may reveal risk factors for artery perforation. Medicines, location of artery perforation, and extent of bleeding are directly associated with the prognosis. Most often, arterial perforations are due to inappropriate wire manipulation or use of oversized balloons or cutting balloons. Prolonged, artery-occluding balloon inflation, covered stent implantation, and embolisation with different agents are among the available treatment options for artery ruptures.Entities:
Keywords: PCI; haemorrhage; interventional radiology
Year: 2018 PMID: 30627253 PMCID: PMC6323580 DOI: 10.5114/pjr.2018.77027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pol J Radiol ISSN: 1733-134X
Figure 1After opening left anterior descending (A), a balloon was placed in the origin of the first diagonal branch (D1), and after predilatation (not shown) within normal pressure range, an injection of contrast showed extravasation into the pericardium (B). Due to continued bleeding, the artery was embolised with a mixture of cyanoacrylate with lipiodol (C)
Figure 2A) A guidewire was placed accidentally into the inferior thyroid artery, causing its perforation. B) To stop the bleeding, a balloon was placed and inflated proximally. C) The procedure was insufficient, and embolisation with a mixture of cyanoacrylate with lipiodol was performed with success. D) Axial computed tomography scan showing a haematoma with contrast medium foci localised in the upper mediastinum and embolic material within the inferior thyroid artery branches
Figure 3A) A guidewire was placed in a chronic totally occluded right coronary artery after multiple attempts with different guidewires. B) An angiogram showed an intramural haematoma (short arrow) with free dye extravasation into the medial layer of the aortic wall at the site of the right sinus of Valsalva (long arrow) (C)