Journal article

Percutaneous Transluminal Dilatation of Inadvertent Partial or Complete Occlusion of the Femoral Artery Caused by Angio-Seal™ Deployment for Puncture Site Closure After Cardiac Catheterization


Authors listBrueck, Martin; Bandorski, Dirk; Rauber, Klaus; Boening, Andreas

Publication year2010

Pages353-357

JournalJournal of Invasive Cardiology

Volume number22

Issue number8

ISSN1042-3931

PublisherHealth Management Publications, Inc.


Abstract
Background The use of access site closure devices in interventional cardiology has expanded rapidly in the past several years Initial reports indicated remarkable safety with these devices but there are a small number of major complications This single center retrospective study was carried out to Investigate the efficacy of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) of inadvertent occlusion or severe stenosis of the femoral artery after deployment of the Angio Seal (TM) closure device From April 1995 to August 2009 a total of 8 587 Angio-Sear (TM) devices were deployed immediately after cardiac catheterization Wit Inn 7 days after deployment clinical signs of acute arterial occlusion or severe stenosis of the femoral artery were evident in 6 patients (0 07 To) They were immediately referred for diagnostic angiography and subsequent PTA Angiography revealed occlusion of the femoral artery at the puncture site level in 4 patients and a severe stenosis in 2 patients Using a cross over access from the opposite groin, PTA of the closed or highly stenosed femoral artery was feasible in all cases At routine follow up 12 months thereafter, there was no clinical evidence of symptomatic restenosis Inadvertent occlusion or high-grade stenosis of the femoral artery after Angio Seal (TM) closure device deployment is a rare but severe complication PTA appears to be a safe and effective method of treatment avoiding surgical removal of the plug



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBrueck, M., Bandorski, D., Rauber, K. and Boening, A. (2010) Percutaneous Transluminal Dilatation of Inadvertent Partial or Complete Occlusion of the Femoral Artery Caused by Angio-Seal™ Deployment for Puncture Site Closure After Cardiac Catheterization, Journal of Invasive Cardiology, 22(8), pp. 353-357

APA Citation styleBrueck, M., Bandorski, D., Rauber, K., & Boening, A. (2010). Percutaneous Transluminal Dilatation of Inadvertent Partial or Complete Occlusion of the Femoral Artery Caused by Angio-Seal™ Deployment for Puncture Site Closure After Cardiac Catheterization. Journal of Invasive Cardiology. 22(8), 353-357.



Keywords


ANGIOPLASTYANGIO-SEALCORONARY INTERVENTIONDEVICEInfectious complicationsPERIPHERAL VASCULAR COMPLICATIONSREGISTRYSCA-AND-ISOCIETY

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:42