1. Complete atrioventricular block due to venous stent migration from innominate vein to right ventricle: a case report.
- Author
-
Kaneko K, Hirono O, Yuuki K, Tamura H, Ishino M, Daidouji H, Ito H, and Kubota I
- Subjects
- Aged, Angioplasty, Balloon adverse effects, Constriction, Pathologic, Humans, Iliac Vein, Male, Treatment Outcome, Atrioventricular Block etiology, Atrioventricular Block therapy, Brachiocephalic Veins, Foreign-Body Migration etiology, Foreign-Body Migration therapy, Heart Ventricles, Prosthesis Failure, Stents adverse effects
- Abstract
A 78-year-old man who had been treated with maintenance hemodialysis for chronic renal failure was admitted with severe edema in left arm for 1 month. Venous angiography showed a severe stenosis in left innominate vein, then, he underwent percutaneous balloon angioplasty and venous stenting (Wall Stent RP). His arm edema soon improved after angioplasty, however, he complained of general fatigue and bradycardia 2 days after the venous angioplasty. Electrocardiogram showed complete atrioventricular block with 35 wide QRS complexes per minute. His echocardiogram showed a pipe-shaped structure with multiple slit and acoustic shadow in right ventricle. His radiographical right ventriculogram revealed the migrated venous stent from innominate vein to right ventricle. We tried to perform percutaneous transvenous stent extraction using Goose-Neck snare catheter, however, the wall stent stuck in the right external iliac vein, and contrast media leaked to the outside of the vascular wall. Therefore, we implanted this stent in the iliac vein with optimal-sized balloon inflation, and succeeded in stopping bleeding. Complete atrioventricular block was recovered to sinus rhythm with left bundle branch block just after the removal of the venous stent from right ventricle, and no cardiovascular events occurred after the treatment.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF