The operation
After diagnosing the transcatheter embolus, the
patient was immediately operated on under general
anesthesia. A standard median incision was applied,
and a 5x5 cm pericardial patch was prepared.
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was then established
through arterial and bicaval cannulation. After
cardiac arrest, a longitudinal incision over the main
PA revealed the device in the main pulmonary artery,
which was in a parallel position inside the vein. The
device, including the fresh thrombus material inside, was then removed from the pulmonary arteriotomy
region (Figure 2 and 3), and the PA contour was
closed via primer suture. A right atriotomy indicated
the presence of ASD, and a weak ASD rim. This
rim was resected until the intact rim could be
seen, and the ASD was closed with the pericardial
patch. After the air in the heart was evacuated,
the cross-clamp was removed, and the heart began
to beat spontaneously. No more complications
were encountered while exiting CPB. Since there
were no postoperative problems, the patient was
transferred to her room, but treatment with warfarin
sodium (5 mg tablet 1x1) and acetylsalicylic acid
(100 mg tablet 1x1) was initiated to avoid a possible
pulmonary embolism. The patient was discharged on
the fifth postoperative day without any complications
after the international normalized ratio (INR) and
warfarin dosage were adjusted.
Figure 2: Removal of the device with a longitudinal incision of the main pulmonary artery.
Chan et al.[3] presented the case of a 23-year-old patient with device emboli and subsequent palpitation and ventricular tachycardial symptoms four hours after the closure of a large ASD. Echocardiography demonstrated that the device was located inside the right ventricle; therefore, the patient was taken to the catheter laboratory again, and the device was successfully retrieved via a percutaneous route.
In a study carried out by Massimo et al.,[4] they reported in detail regarding the complications associated with ASD closure. A total of 36 complications were observed after the closure procedure was performed on 417 patients, and the authors classified the complications as either major or minor. Major complications included device malposition and device emboli, whereas minor complications referred to noncritical malposition, pericardial effusion, thrombus formation at the left atrial disk, right iliac vein dissection, hematoma at the entry site, and hemorrhage at the retropharyngeal region. In addition, they noted that peripheral emboli occurred in the left leg of one patient a year after the procedure, and this patient died suddenly one and a half years later. This death was reported as a late complication.
Furthermore, in a study conducted by Vitiello et al.,[5] 4,952 patients underwent the transcatheter closure procedure, and the most frequent complications were arrhythmia (22.7%) and vascular hemorrhage (7.5%), and device embolization (3%).
Butera et al.[6] compared percutaneous and surgical closure of secundum atrial defects and determined that percutaneous closure has lower mortality and morbidity rates than surgical closure. Their cohort study was conducted on 3,082 patients, and 6.8% reported major complications at surgical closure while only 1.9% reported them at percutaneous closure.
While transcatheter closure procedures are normally safe, complications are possible. Therefore, a rapid diagnosis is crucial in order to remove the device percutaneously. However, after determining the cardiac level of the device, appropriate surgical intervention may be required.
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.
1) Du ZD, Hijazi ZM, Kleinman CS, Silverman NH, Larntz K;
Amplatzer Investigators. Comparison between transcatheter
and surgical closure of secundum atrial septal defect in
children and adults: results of a multicenter nonrandomized
trial. J Am Coll Cardiol 2002;39:1836-44.
2) Al-Saady NM, Obel OA, Camm AJ. Left atrial appendage:
structure, function, and role in thromboembolism. Heart
1999;82:547-54.
3) Chan KT, Cheng BC. Retrieval of an embolized amplatzer
septal occluder. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2010;75:465-8.
4) Chessa M, Carminati M, Butera G, Bini RM, Drago M,
Rosti L, et al. Early and late complications associated with
transcatheter occlusion of secundum atrial septal defect. J
Am Coll Cardiol 2002;39:1061-5.