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Article Type:
Javier Goland, Ezequiel Yasuda, Martín Monteverde, Silvia GarbuginoArticle Type:
- Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital de Clínicas, José de San Martín, Ciudad de Buenos Aires.
- Department of Cardiology, Hospital de Clínicas, José de San Martín, Ciudad de Buenos Aires.
Javier Goland
Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital de Clínicas, José de San Martín, Ciudad de Buenos Aires.
DOI:10.25259/SNI-171-2019
Copyright: © 2019 Surgical Neurology International This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
How to cite this article: Javier Goland, Ezequiel Yasuda, Martín Monteverde, Silvia Garbugino. Catheter fragment retrieved from an arterial branch of the right middle cerebral artery. 28-Jun-2019;10:129
How to cite this URL: Javier Goland, Ezequiel Yasuda, Martín Monteverde, Silvia Garbugino. Catheter fragment retrieved from an arterial branch of the right middle cerebral artery. 28-Jun-2019;10:129. Available from: http://surgicalneurologyint.com/surgicalint-articles/9441/
Abstract
Case Description: A 59-year-old male patient underwent cine-coronario-graphy through a trans-radial approach because of angina. During the study, a 6Fr catheter fragment ruptured, detached and migrated to a right middle cerebral artery branch. We recovered it with a coronary balloon.
Conclusion: A coronary angioplasty balloon is an option for retrieving foreign objects or device fragments that have migrated into cerebral vasculature.
Keywords: Endovascular procedure, Fragment catheter, Complication, Coronary baloon
BACKGROUND
CASE PRESENTATION
Figure 1:
Coronary angiography with a catheter located in the coronary artery. The dotted circle shows the ruptured distal fragment of the catheter, before it detached.Figure 2:
Skull radiography, anteroposterior view. The dotted white circle shows the catheter fragment lodged in the right middle cerebral artery.Treatment
We decided to attempt retrieval of the catheter segment using the same radial approach as used for coronary angiography. With the patient under general anesthesia, the right carotid artery was catheterized with a Simmons II catheter (Merit Medical, South Jordan UT, USA), which was exchanged, using a 260 mm guide wire (Radifocus, Terumo, Somerset NJ, USA) in the external carotid, for a 6Fr guide catheter JR (Merit Medical, South Jordan UT, USA). We then catheterized the right internal carotid artery with a 6Fr guide catheter (Merit Medical, South Jordan UT, USA). Angiography revealed a radio-opaque fragment localized distal to the right medial cerebral artery bifurcation. With a 0.014 microwire (Hybrid 12–14, Balt, Montmorency, France), we navigated inside the catheter fragment, up to the M2-M3 segment. Then, we tried to pass it with a double-lumen 6 mm per 7 mm balloon (Eclipse, Balt, Montmorency, France), but it was impossible to pass distal to the catheter fragment with the balloon, and when we inflated it, the fragment was displaced distally [ Figures 3 and 4 ].Figure 3:
Right internal carotid artery angiography, left anterior oblique view. The dotted white circle shows a double-lumen balloon inflated within the fragment of the catheter, the latter lodged in a branch of the right middle cerebral artery.Figure 4:
Skull radiography, right anterior oblique view. Note inside the white circle the balloon inflated displacing the fragment distally.Figure 5:
(a) Skull radiography. Continued white arrow shows the inflated balloon half inside the catheter fragment and half distal to it. Dotted white arrow shows the catheter fragment. (b) Skull radiography. Dotted white circle shows the inflated balloon pushing the catheter fragment at M1 segment of cerebral media artery. (c) Facial bones radiography. Dotted white circle shows the catheter fragment near the tip of the guide catheter at cervical segment of carotid artery. (d) Chest radiography centered on the clavicle. Inside the dotted white circle, note the inflated balloon and catheter fragment at the level of the right common carotid’s origin. White arrow shows the tip of the guide catheter at the level of the right brachiocephalic trunk.Figure 7:
Follow-up angiography with no evidence of vascular lesions or residual intravascular evidence of the retrieved catheter fragment.DISCUSSION
Cerebral emboli are a described complication of cerebrovascular procedures, and different devices have been utilized to retrieve them. Specific devices, listed previously, have been described for retrieving foreign bodies from the cerebrovascular circulation. Another technique, utilizing two microcatheters, or a microwire plus a microcatheter, or a stent retriever, has been employed in such circumstances.
However, there are no published reports of such a large fragment of catheter migrating to the cerebral circulation and being extracted, so it was not easy for us to decide which device to use in such a circumstance. In our patient, the foreign body that migrated was a 10 mm fragment of a JR 6Fr diagnosis catheter, which became lodged in a branch of the right middle cerebral artery. This was a problem since it was constructed of a rigid material and hence difficult to ensnare with a retriever stent, with a microcatheter and guidewire, or with a microsnare.
For this case, we believed that the best option was a balloon. Initially, we used a remodeling balloon that reaches up to 6 mm of diameter; however, since it was for cerebral vessels, it had a small enough profile. However, it was not rigid enough to completely pass through the catheter fragment. Then, we decided to try a lower profile coronary angioplasty balloon, which was a little stiffer; and this allowed us to cross the catheter fragment without difficulty. Once the tip of our guide catheter was reached, since it was the same size as the migrated fragment, we extracted the catheter, together with the guide wire, until we reached the introducer and then removed everything together, thereby recovering the migrated fragment.
The patient had postprocedural headaches, for which a CT scan was considered indicated; and it revealed a SAH. We believe that the microwire’s rigidity was the cause of this complication, puncturing a vessel as the angioplasty balloon was being advanced. Follow-up cerebral angiography identified no contrast extravasation or pseudoaneurysm. The patient’s headaches resolved, with no further complications, and he was discharged 1 week after the procedure, at which time no residual SAH was observed on CT.
CONCLUSION
Cerebral angiography is always required after an endovascular intervention.
Transradial artery approach is a good option for cerebral endovascular procedures.
Declaration of patient consent
Financial support and sponsorship
Conflicts of interest
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