Survival depends on rapid recanalization of the pulmonary arterial occlusion to reduce right ventricular afterload and prevent recurrent PE. The standard medical management for patients with massive PE is systemic thrombolysis. However, approximately one-third of the patients with this condition are not eligible for thrombolysis because of major contraindications, such as prior surgery, trauma, stroke, or advanced cancer. In lieu of achieving recanalization, catheter thrombectomies with thromboaspiration and open surgical embolectomies are alternative treatment options. For patients who are deemed to be poor surgical candidates, thromboaspiration is the only alternative treatment modality.
Herein, we present a patient with massive PE who had recently undergone coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. The patient clinically deteriorated in a matter of hours and recovered only after a thromboaspiration procedure.
The patient was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for full monitorization. The arterial oxygen saturation was 60% without oxygen inhalation, and the central venous pressure was between 15 and 20 mmHg. The systolic blood pressure started to fall despite treatment with dopamine and adrenaline, so the patient was anticoagulated with unfractioned heparin infusion. Due to the recent cardiac surgery, fibrinolysis was avoided. The patient was followed up for 12 hours; however, the arterial oxygen saturation and blood pressure remained low in spite of the aggressive treatment. The patient was then taken to the catheter laboratory for a thrombectomy and the thromboaspiration procedure.
Under local anesthesia, femoral vein puncture in the right groin was performed under sonographic guidance, and a 6F introducer sheath was placed in the common femoral vein. Then a 5F pigtail catheter was advanced through the inferior vena cava (IVC) to the pulmonary truncus, and a pulmonary arteriography was obtained. A saddle embolus at the origin of the RPA extending to all of the branches was detected. There was also partial thrombus formation at the origin of the LPA. Next, a 6F guiding catheter was advanced through the RPA, and with the help of a 0.035 inch hydrophilic guidewire, the guiding catheter was advanced beyond the thrombus Recurrent thromboaspirations were performed; hence, the fragmentation was achieved (Figure 3). In the control angiogram obtained after retrieval, the thrombus in the MPA had disappeared. At the end of the procedure, the patient had respiratory arrest followed by cardiac arrest. He was immediately intubated and resuscitated with cardiac massage and then transferred back to the ICU. In the following four days, the patient was weaned from inotropic support. He was extubated on the third day. In the interim, the patient was also treated for acute renal insufficiency. The patient stayed in the ICU for a total of five days and was discharged home on the 12th day on warfarin treatment. Fourteen days after discharge, control multislice CT was performed and revealed recanalized pulmonary artery branches with a totally patent MPA (Figure 4).
The standard medical management for patients with massive PE is systemic thrombolysis and rapid initiation of anticoagulation with intravenous unfractionated heparin. A catheter thrombectomy with thrombosapiration or a surgical embolectomy are alternative treatment modalities to thrombolysis, particularly in the presence of an increased risk of bleeding.
Thromboaspiration has some advantages, such as reducing the time for recanalization, lowering the hemorrhagic risk, preventing distal clot migration, and decreasing the dose of thrombolytic agents related to bleeding complications.[5] It is more efficiently performed with a fresh, nonadhesive clot, as was observed in our case. While catheter thrombectomies are not always the preferred alternative, there is general agreement regarding the three main criteria for performing this procedure in a patient with acute PE (Table 1).[4]
There is currently no widely accepted protocol for thromboaspiration.[6] Kucher et al.[4] suggested performing early thromboaspiration for patients who have contraindications for thrombolysis and whose shock index (heart rate/systolic blood pressure) is greater than 1. Our patient was in atrial fibrillation rhythm and hypotensive when admitted to the emergency unit. Since he had undergone a CABG operation 13 days previously, thrombolysis and a surgical embolectomy were ruled out. Heparin infusion was initiated immediately. The patient deteriorated hemodynamically in the hours after he was admitted; therefore, he was put on dopamine and adrenaline treatment. As the arterial oxygen saturation gradually decreased, we decided to perform thromboaspiration. Following this procedure, the patient recovered significantly over the next six hours.
Complications with catheter thrombectomies are rare, with the most serious being the perforation or dissection of a major pulmonary arterial branch. Other complications include bleeding from heparin anticoagulation, contrast-induced nephropathy, an anaphylactic reaction to the iodine contrast, and vascular access complications, such as hematoma, pseudoaneurysm, or arteriovenous fistula.
In conclusion, when patients are poor candidates for systemic thrombolysis and surgical embolectomies, thromboaspiration may be the only viable treatment option and should be pursued if at all possible. Although reperfusion therapy was rapidly successful in our patient, randomized studies are needed to find out whether this strategy can have a similar benefit for all patients with PE and right ventricular dysfunction.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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