The danger of imminent septic complications is of primary concern with intravascular catheter fragments. Guidewires and vena cava filters may perforate the vascular wall. For these types of foreign objects, there is a clear and urgent indication for percutaneous removal.
Figure 1: The hard end of the foreign body located in right atrrium.
Figure 2: The soft of the foreign body in the interior vena cava.
Figure 3: The position of the foreign body seen extraluminally.
Figure 4: The position and the course of the foreign body seen extraluminally.
There are various reports about foreign objects being left in the body cavities and the vascular system during invasive procedures involving the cavity in which the obect is located. This case was unique that the guidewire was left in the venous system for six years without a complication and without causing any harm to the patient. It was diagnosed incidentally with a coronary angiography and luckily it was seen without causing any of the complications described above. The importance of this case is that it should always be checked to see the hard end of the guidewire is sticking out the end of the sheath dilator system to prevent it from entering the venous system and complications from happening. Results from the percutaneous treatment of intravascular foreign bodies continue to prove the procedure's capabilities as a highly efficient, atraumatic method with success rates of 90% or above. Based on the high frequency with which this method is performed, its relevance cannot be underestimated. Creatively used and combined, the numerous available rescue devices can be adapted to the situation at hand and permit a safe retrieval of the intravascular foreign body, even in difficult cases.
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