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Percutaneous femoral access: Stuck guide wire, decannulation difficulty due to unravelling and knotting

  • Bhanu Pratap Singh Chauhan (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Binita Dholakia (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Ashfaque Khan (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Chirag Hirani (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Satheesh Kumar (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Dibya Jyoti Mahakul (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Abhishek Katyal (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Wajid Nazir (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research) ;
  • Daljit Singh (Department of Neurosurgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research)
  • 투고 : 2023.06.27
  • 심사 : 2023.12.20
  • 발행 : 2024.06.30

초록

Percutaneous techniques for femoral arterial access are increasingly being performed due to advances in endovascular cerebral procedures, as they provide a less morbid and minimally invasive approach than open procedures. Common complications associated with this peripheral puncture include hematoma, bleeding, pseudoaneurysm, arteriovenous fistula, retroperitoneal bleeding, inadvertent venous puncture, dissection, etc. The retrograde femoral access is currently the most frequently used arterial access as it is technically straightforward, allows for the use of larger size sheaths and catheters, allows repeated attempts, etc. Although being technically less challenging, grave complications can occur due to hardware failure. Here, we present a case of unruptured posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) aneurysm, who underwent uneventful diagnostic cerebral digital substraction angiography (DSA) via right femoral artery route on first attempt, but on second attempt for therapeutic intervention, landed up with stuck guide wire and faced decannulation difficulty due to unravelling of guide wire and multiple knot formation, which was finally removed after multiple attempts at pulling and improvised manoeuvres. Such cannulation and decannulation difficulties have been reported multiple times for central venous access, but extremely rarely for femoral routes, making this case a rarity and worth reporting.

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참고문헌

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