Femoral artery pseudo-aneurysms--changes in treatment, report of 7 years

G. Szendro, A. Klimov, A. Lennox, B. Jonathan, L. Avrahami, B. Yechieli, M. Griffin, S. Yurfest, Y. Charach, L. Golcman, A. N. Nicolaides

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    4 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    The femoral artery remains the most used peripheral site for radiological catheter access. With a greater number of both diagnostic and therapeutic procedures being performed by interventional radiologists and cardiologists, and with larger catheters being used for stenting and endovascular grafting, the incidence of iatrogenic pseudo-aneurysms reported has reached as high as 0.5-2%. Ideally, they should thrombus spontaneously. However, when this does not occur, management options include: observation, ultrasound-guided obliterative compression, direct thrombin injection, embolization, stent graft insertion, and very rarely-surgery. During a 7-year period (1992-1999) we treated 131 cases of femoral artery false aneurysms. Until 1998 ultrasound-guided compression-obliteration, with a 95% success rate, was our method of choice. Since 1998, direct thrombin injection, with 100% success in 24 cases, has become our preferred method. It is pain-free, fully successful even in anticoagulated patients, and is currently our treatment of choice.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)187-190, 247, 246
    JournalHarefuah
    Volume139
    Issue number5-6
    StatePublished - 1 Jan 2000

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • General Medicine

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