Vascular Health and Risk Management (Mar 2015)

Endovascular repair of a life-threatening radiation-induced ruptured false aneurysm of the intrathoracic left subclavian artery: case report

  • Hizette P,
  • Horn D,
  • Lemaitre J,
  • Segers B

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2015, no. default
pp. 219 – 222

Abstract

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Pascale Hizette, David Horn, Jean Lemaitre, Bernard SegersDepartment of Vascular and Thoracic Surgery, St Pierre University Hospital, Brussels, BelgiumAbstract: Massive hemorrhage in tracheostomy patients is generally described as a result of a tracheoinnominate artery fistula. Other etiologies for rupture of a false aneurysm are rare. The classical procedure for subclavian artery aneurysm is open surgery. Endovascular techniques have been accepted by several authors as a possible minimally invasive alternative. We report a life-threatening radiation-induced ruptured false aneurysm of the intrathoracic subclavian artery successfully treated by endovascular stent graft through left brachial access in a tracheostomy patient. Keywords: tracheostomy hemorrhage, radiation-induced aneurysm, subclavian artery, ruptured aneurysm, endovascular repair