Interactive Transcript
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Let's transition to limb ischemia complications.
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What we have here is a finding.
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So, in this patient, who is 68 years of age,
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had a STEMI, treated with percutaneous coronary
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intervention via the radial arterial axis.
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Now, your team calls you and says, you know, the patient
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has hand pain, weakness, and tingling at rest.
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So what are you suspicious of?
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I would say, maybe, I would be suspicious of hand
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ischemia secondary to radial artery thrombosis.
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So the patient is sent to the OR
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for the acute surgical emergency.
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So fluoroscopy reveals the following imaging.
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What do you see?
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What is the significant finding on this imaging?
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Well, I would say this vessel's intact,
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but this vessel's kind of petering out.
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So what we see is the absence of the radial
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artery, which was the vessel that we accessed.
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So not a good look.
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So what might be a significant
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history for this patient?
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Well, previous access of the ulnar artery,
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previously diagnosed ulnar artery stenosis,
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or an anatomic variation where the ulnar
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artery does not connect to the palmar arches.
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I would say all of the above.
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Okay?
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So previous access to the ulnar artery would
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obviously, you know, if, if, if the thrombosis
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occurs in the radial artery and there's no ulnar
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artery to feed it retrograde, that can cause issues.
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If the ulnar artery had stenosis,
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critically and now under stress because
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the radial artery is not sort of patent,
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it's hemodynamically significantly stenosed.
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That's a problem.
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If we have an anatomic variation where there
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is no connection between the two, like in that
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sort of type D formation in the waveform for the
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Barbeau test, where there's no connection between
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the two systems, the ulnar or the radial artery
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system, the palmar arches are not intact, then
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that could also, sort of, increase this patient's
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predisposition to this sort of ischemia.
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So you want to, sort of, really understand
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anything that compromises the collaterals to
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the palmar arteries can predispose a patient to
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hand ischemia after radial artery access and
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is important to identify before the procedure.
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So which examination should have been
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completed to have prevented this complication?
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Should you have checked
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the patency of the radial artery with ultrasound?
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Should you have used ultrasound to
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measure the diameter of the ulnar artery?
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What about a Barbeau test to check
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the patency of the ulnar artery?
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What about double-checking the radial
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artery pulse before and after the procedure?
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Well, I would say a Barbeau test to check the patency
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of the ulnar artery, which is what you're doing.
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You're trying to determine that there is collateral
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flow from the ulnar artery in the setting of
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thrombosis or, sort of, manual compression of
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the radial artery, where you're simulating,
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sort of, a worst-case scenario situation.
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So here we have duplex ultrasonography.
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And it's important to know that it can be
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used to assess for collateral circulation
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prior to radial artery access, but this is
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actually not routinely used in practice.
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