Radiology Case Reports (Jan 2024)

Endovascular aspiration of native tricuspid valve vegetation using INARI catheter in a patient with methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis

  • Muhammad Hasib Khalil, MBBS,
  • Anthony Wong,
  • Timothy Shih, DO, MS,
  • Anuj Garg, MD,
  • Youssef Elias, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 387 – 392

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: A middle-aged man presented to the hospital with chief complaint of worsening chest pain and shortness of breath. He was found to have methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) bacteremia, acute hypoxic respiratory failure secondary to MSSA pneumonia and septic emboli. The patient underwent a transesophageal echocardiogram which revealed a large, mobile tricuspid valve vegetation secondary to endocarditis. The patient was initially managed conservatively with intravenous antibiotics and supportive measures. However, his respiratory status worsened due to persistence of a large tricuspid valve vegetation which progressed to bilateral septic pulmonary emboli with peripheral cavitary lesions identified on follow-up CT of the chest. In order to debulk the large tricuspid vegetation, the patient successfully underwent endovascular mechanical aspiration of tricuspid valve vegetation utilizing the 20-Fr INARI curved Flowtriever (INARI Medical, CA) catheter. This case highlights a new, minimally invasive technique and device employed in treating native valve vegetations caused by endocarditis as an alternative approach to surgery.

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