Interactive Transcript
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So let's review this learning case.
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We have a 47-year-old female.
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She presents with left supraclavicular swelling.
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And this occurs after she had a left
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subclavian venous surgical port placed.
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So the surgeon gave the IR a call after the
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left subclavian arterial port was placed,
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which he actually realized after the fact
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when he accessed the port and realized
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that there was pulsatile blood flow.
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He removed the port and then subsequently placed a
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port in the subclavian vein as initially intended.
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Unfortunately, as we know, the subclavian is
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a very hard site to hold pressure on, being
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sort of subclavicular, and the hemostasis
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that he intended to achieve was not achieved.
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So therefore the IR was called in order to
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evaluate this rapidly expanding hematoma, which
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was secondary to this inadvertent arterial injury.
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So what was performed?
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What would you do in this setting?
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Well again, when we have active hemorrhage,
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we need to consider our options.
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Conservative management?
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Oh, you know, let's just watch and wait.
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This doesn't quite strike me
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as a watch and wait situation.
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Could we embolize?
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Alright, well, are we going to embolize the
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extremity, sort of across this particular point,
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this vessel that feeds the upper extremity?
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Ah, probably not a good idea.
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Are we going to call our surgical colleagues?
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Well, our surgical colleagues actually called us.
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So, the final answer is, maybe
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exclude this with a stent.
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And what kind of stent are we going to use?
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Maybe this little guy here,
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which is a stent graft.
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A nice, sort of very cylindrical
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structure that has almost like a little
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sort of chicken wire appearance that
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has impermeable cloth throughout, okay?
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This impermeable cloth allows it to
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exclude and repair the vessel so that
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now it serves as almost functioning like
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a native conduit, excluding that bleed.
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So after this was placed, what do we see here?
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Looks pretty good.
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Contrast flowing throughout, no longer
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seeing that bleed that we initially saw.
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We'll play that again, and we're happy with it.
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CT scan was then performed, of
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course, to evaluate the patient.
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Here we see this nice curve in the patient's
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neck, without evidence of hematoma.
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Fat planes looking pretty good on the right side.
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On the left side, where the enlarging hematoma
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was noted, here we see some residue
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of course, from his prior hematoma that has
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deformed the curvature of the neck.
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And here we see our stent alive
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and well with patent blood flow
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throughout the subclavian artery.
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So what we want to know and what we want
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to sort of recognize is that vasospasm
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is a potential complication in any
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interventional radiology procedure, or any
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endovascular procedure for that matter.
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Active conscious extravasation can also
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be seen subclinically during an angiogram.
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What we also want to recognize is that arterial
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rupture may occur inadvertently during both
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arterial, as well as venous access.
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We want to manage coagulopathy and we
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want to consider stent placement in
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challenging cases of arterial extravasation.
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And of course, this is a tool, a bird in the
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hand, an ace in the hole, which is digital
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compression should be applied with or without
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protamine sulfate to neutralize heparin.
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