Interactive Transcript
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So here we have a 68-year-old woman.
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She presents to the emergency room four
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days after an uncomplicated catheter
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angiography with left brachial artery access.
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Now she has numbness and
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coldness of her left forearm.
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So what does the ultrasound show?
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It reveals the following findings.
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So what are we seeing here?
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What are you most suspicious of?
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Well, there's an echogenic little
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sort of mass going on here within
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this sort of saccula outpouching.
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You know, and there's no
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flow on the color Doppler.
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Very strange.
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So I would say we're most suspicious of thrombus
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at the affected site causing acute ischemia.
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So, what's arterial thrombosis and occlusion?
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So, basically, thrombus formation
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sort of occurs and results in
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progressive vessel lumen obliteration.
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And it causes focal cessation
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of flow in that vessel.
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Has an incidence of about 3 percent when
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we're looking at transfemoral arterial
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interventions, particularly post angioplasty.
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And the ultrasound image really shows
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thrombus with varying degrees of echogenicity,
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internal complexity, and associated
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reduction in the intraluminal flow.
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Now if you have chronic thrombus, this
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is sort of usually decreased in luminal
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diameter, often now with eccentric wall
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adherent thrombus, which oftentimes remodels.
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And the therapy here is thrombolysis with
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anticoagulation to prevent new clots from forming.
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How does arterial thrombosis actually present?
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Well, we think about sort of the six Ps of
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acute ischemia: the pain, the coolness of the
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extremity, the paleness, the color, the pulses
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that end up being reduced when we sort of put
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our fingers on those sort of strategic pulses
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in that extremity: the ulnar, radial, the DPT.
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46 00:01:36,240 --> 00:01:38,160 We think about the pins and needles
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feeling that results in paresthesias, and
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paralysis, which is usually the last to occur.
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Um, that indicates advanced ischemia.
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Okay, and this all results from
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focal cessation of blood flow.
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So how does arterial thrombosis
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appear on Doppler ultrasounds?
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What we see is spectral broadening with
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a biphasic pattern in the thrombosed artery.
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We sometimes see this monophasic
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low-velocity flow distal
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to that point, okay?
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And that's a particularly important
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thing for us to keep in mind.
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And so what we're seeing here is a
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ultrasound of right
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lower extremity arterial thrombosis.
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We see color flow on either side.
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And there is aliasing.
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This turbulent flow in this region
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is being blocked by this
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occlusion, which is actually a closure device
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that was deployed in the center of the vessel,
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superimposed on a focus of atherosclerosis.
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So one of the things that you want
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to ask yourself is, how can a CT
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scan help diagnose arterial thrombosis?
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Well, contrast-enhanced CT scans
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are particularly good and recommended to
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determine the extent of an
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occluded site and really help us
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understand the underlying disease.
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We have this case, as we talked about before,
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of seeing significant Mockenberg-type
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calcification, or coral reef calcification,
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in the region of the common femoral artery.
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So is that the issue?
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The CT scan is going to give
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us a good little overview.
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So you know, when you have sort of
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heavy arterial calcification, sometimes
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that can give us some artifacts.
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Um, it can confound the diagnosis, but
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a CT scan is as beneficial as a CT
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scan is, but we just want to know
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about some of the pitfalls that exist.
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We have non-contrast enhanced scans.
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When we're looking at sort of femoral artery
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thrombosis, as in the case of that image that
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I showed you of that sonographic evaluation
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that showed sort of the collagen plug from a
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closure device in the center of the vessel,
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what we see here is that big sort of kind of
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almost like, it's almost like a little iceberg
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into the vessel and even on this non-
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contrast scan we can still appreciate that.
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So what's the management?
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Well, of course, you know, we want
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to treat the patient immediately.
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We want to prevent new clots from forming.
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Anticoagulation, unfractionated low
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molecular weight heparin can be administered.
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Intervention subsequent to that is actually
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sort of, you know, determined based on etiology,
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severity, and duration of the ischemia.
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Watchful waiting is an option.
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Thrombolytic therapy is an option.
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And of course, for extremity
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revascularization, with a number of tools,
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including thrombectomy, is also an option.
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So when we think about fluoroscopy before and
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after thrombolytic therapy and anticoagulation,
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you know, here's a case whereby we have
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thrombosis of the brachial and axillary arteries.
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Um, in this case, sort of brachial artery.
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And after thrombolysis, we
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see nice, clean vasculature.
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Um, and this is the benefit of using TPA.
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With a little sort of heparin anticoagulation
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to prevent new clots from forming.
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