Volume 84, Issue 2 p. 257-261
Peripheral Vascular Disease

Late presenting, contained rupture of the superficial femoral artery following atherectomy and stenting: Case report and literature review

Stacey Clegg MD

Stacey Clegg MD

University of Colorado Hospital, University of Colorado, Denver, Aurora, Colorado

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Arash Aghel MD

Arash Aghel MD

University of Colorado Hospital, University of Colorado, Denver, Aurora, Colorado

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R. Kevin Rogers MD, MSc

Corresponding Author

R. Kevin Rogers MD, MSc

University of Colorado Hospital, University of Colorado, Denver, Aurora, Colorado

Correspondence to: R. Kevin Rogers, MD, MSc, B132, 12401 East 17th Ave, Room 511, Aurora, CO 80045. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 23 January 2014
Citations: 2

Conflict of interest: Nothing to report.

Abstract

Excisional atherectomy alone or followed by stenting is considered an appropriate treatment strategy for patients with lifestyle-limiting claudication due to obstructive infra-inguinal peripheral arterial disease (Ramaiah et al., J Endovasc Ther 2006;13:592–6021). We present a case of a 69-year-old man with eccentric severely calcified disease of the superficial femoral artery (SFA) treated with excisional atherectomy followed by stenting with an interwoven nitinol stent. The procedure was complicated by extravascular stent migration associated with a contained rupture presenting 30 days after the intervention. The complication was successfully treated with a stent graft. Although rare, pseudoaneurysms have been reported at the site of prior atherectomy; however, this case is the first description of a contained rupture post atherectomy associated with erosion of a nitinol stent into an extra-luminal position. The mechanism and management of this complication are discussed. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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