Project description:A 74-year old woman underwent "mini-mitral" valve surgery via a right thoracotomy. The pulmonary artery catheter could not be removed thereafter and was found to be pierced by the atriotomy suture. Removal was performed by percutaneously lacerating the catheter above and below the suture, leaving behind a small segment. (Level of Difficulty: Advanced.).
Project description:BackgroundEsophageal foreign body (FB) is usually seen in children, prisoners, or patients with psychiatric disorders, most of which can be removed with endoscope.Case presentationWe herein report a mentally normal adult inadvertently swallowing a needle, which pierced through the esophagus into the adventitia of pulmonary artery. Computed tomography angiography confirmed its specific location, and urgently, surgical removal was performed after the endoscopic attempt. The patient recovered well and was discharged without any complication of the esophageal perforation.ConclusionSurgical treatment should be carried out aggressively if the esophageal FB is out of reach for endoscopic removal or if complications cannot be resolved endoscopically.
Project description:Pulmonary artery to the left atrial fistula is a rare anomaly. Two young males presented with effort intolerance and cyanosis and had large pulmonary artery to left atrial fistula from right and left pulmonary artery, respectively. The right-sided fistula was closed with a large duct occluder device in transseptal approach whereas the left-sided fistula was closed with a large muscular ventricular septal device. Complete occlusion and symptomatic relief was achieved in both cases. In the follow up the patients were doing well.
Project description:While aortico-right atrial tunnels with left to right shunt from aorta to right atrium are reported widely, pulmonary artery to right atrial tunnels have not been described so far. Such a tunnel will lead to a circular shunt with a recirculation of blood in the right sided cardiac chambers repeatedly bypassing the pulmonary capillary bed. This newly described pulmonary artery to right atrial tunnel was closed nonsurgically with a duct occluder after angiographic delineation.
Project description:A 25-year-old male patient with a giant right atrium presented with atrial tachycardia. Electroanatomic mapping revealed micro-re-entry from a low-voltage zone in the region of the right atrial appendage. Linear ablations across the low-voltage zone terminated the tachycardia. The remaining right atrial tissue was electrically normal. (Level of Difficulty: Intermediate.).
Project description:Sixteen years after a long admission for a serious occupational accident, a 38-year-old man presented with intermittent atypical chest pain. Upon investigations a retained fragment of a pulmonary artery catheter was found in the right ventricle. Throughout the years between his accident and the current presentation he did not have any symptoms or signs of complications associated with the retained catheter such as arrhythmia, sepsis or thromboembolism. Upon presenting his case at the medical/surgical multidisciplinary meeting it was decided that the probability of complications occurring at this stage was low as the catheter fragment would have endothelialised and the risk of retrieval would outweigh the benefits. This scenario highlighted the importance of understanding the possible long-term complications of retained catheter fragments, the importance of being aware of the limitation of these devices and the need to be more vigilant in the emergency setting.