| Literature DB >> 33996328 |
Scott Hatcherson1, Vikramaditya S Venkata2, Surya Aedma3, Nikhil Nalluri4, Mini L Sivadasan5.
Abstract
Needle embolisms in the heart are quite rare, and their management is largely based on clinical experience. We describe a patient with chest pain and shortness of breath, whose electrocardiogram revealed subtle inferolateral ST segment elevations. The patient was found to have a bloody pericardial effusion causing tamponade from a long-ago injected needle. Removal of a needle is a complicated decision, that should be done in a multi-disciplinary fashion to minimize complications. Removal may not always be necessary if the needle is in a stable position and not in danger of migration.Entities:
Keywords: foreign body embolism; iv needle embolism; needle causing pericardial effusion; needle in pericardium; right ventricular foreign body
Year: 2021 PMID: 33996328 PMCID: PMC8115191 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.14469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Electrocardiogram on arrival
Figure 2Angiography showing presence of a needle
Figure 3Computerized tomography showing presence of needle
Figure 4Needle during open sternotomy
Clinical characteristics of case reports of cardiac needle embolizations
IJ - Internal jugular; RV - Right ventricle; LV - Left ventricle
| Author | Year | Chief complaint | Pericarditis/Pericardial effusion | EKG changes | Location of embolization | Type of intervention performed |
| Horattas and Moorman [ | 1988 | No cardiac symptoms | No | Not mentioned | Right atrium/ventricle | None |
| Gyrtrup et al. [ | 1989 | Chest pain | Yes | Not mentioned | Right ventricle wall | Thoracotomy/pericardial fluid drained. Needle removed |
| Lemaire et al. [ | 1998 | Chest pain | Abscess under pericardium | Diffuse t wave inversions | Right ventricle wall in the abscess | Open sternotomy-abscess drained. Needle removed |
| Thorne and Collins [ | 1998 | Incidental finding at autopsy | No | No | Right ventricle wall | None. Incidental finding at autopsy after sudden death. |
| Ngaage and Cowen [ | 2001 | Dyspnea | No | No | Right ventricle wall | Not suitable for transvenous removal. Patient refused surgical intervention. |
| Low et al. [ | 2005 | Chest pain | No | Widespread concave ST elevation | Right ventricle inferior wall | As there is no effusion/stable hemodynamically. Treated conservatively with analgesics. |
| Steiner et al. [ | 2012 | Chest pain | Yes | No EKG changes seen | Right ventricle | Pericardiocentesis/pericardial window placement for recurrent effusion. Needle remove with a bioptome/through right IJ. |
| Al-Sahaf et al. [ | 2016 | Chest pain/dyspnea | Yes | None mentioned | Right ventricle septum | Pericardiocentesis. Thoracotomy needle removal one year later as needle migrated and caused pneumothorax. |
| Danek et al. [ | 2016 | Chest pain | No | Peaked T waves indicating early repolarization | RV apex myocardium/projecting into LV | Stable hemodynamically, no intervention. Stable at one year follow-up. |
| Bensted et al. [ | 2017 | Chest pain | Yes | None mentioned | Intraventricular septum--migrated to pericardial space | Sternotomy- drainage and removal of needle. |
| Hill et al. [ | 2019 | Chest pain | Yes | ST elevation-inferior/lateral leads | RV pericardial space | Pericardiocentesis. Effusion was not re-occurring. So conservative approach. Needle not removed. |
| Yen et al. [ | 2019 | Chest pain | Yes | None mentioned | RV, penetrating the wall. Embedded in the myocardium | Pericardiocentesis. Endovascular approach to remove needle unsuccessful. So conservative approach favoured over surgery. Two months follow-up echo stable. |