Angiogram complications: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*Complications from diagnostic or interventional catheterization (cardiac or peripheral) via femoral, radial, or brachial access
*Complication rate ~1-2% for diagnostic procedures, higher for interventional
*Patients typically present to ED within hours to days after discharge from cath lab


==DDx==
==Clinical Features==
#hematoma (visual exam)
===Access Site Complications===
#arteriovenous fistula (bruit)
*Hematoma: Most common; swelling, ecchymosis, tenderness at puncture site
#retroperitoneal bleed (peritoneal sign)
*Pseudoaneurysm: Pulsatile mass with bruit; risk of rupture or compression
#renal failure (creatinine)
*Arteriovenous fistula: Continuous bruit (''machinery murmur'') over access site
*Retroperitoneal hemorrhage: [[Abdominal pain]], back/flank pain, [[hypotension]], dropping hematocrit without visible bleeding — HIGH mortality if missed
*Arterial thrombosis/occlusion: Cool, pale, pulseless limb distal to access site
 
===Systemic Complications===
*[[Contrast-induced nephropathy]]: Rise in creatinine 24-72 hrs post-procedure
*Cholesterol embolization (''blue toe syndrome''): Livedo reticularis, blue/purple toes, preserved pedal pulses
*[[Stroke]]: From catheter-related thromboembolism
*[[Acute coronary syndrome (main)|Stent thrombosis]]: Chest pain, ST changes after recent PCI (especially if antiplatelet therapy was interrupted)
*Allergic/anaphylactoid reaction: To contrast dye (usually during procedure)
*[[Cardiac tamponade]]: From coronary perforation (rare)
 
==Differential Diagnosis==
*Hematoma (visual exam)
*Arteriovenous fistula (bruit)
*[[Retroperitoneal hemorrhage]]
*[[Acute kidney injury]] (creatinine)
*[[Vascular injury]]
*[[Cholesterol embolization]]
 
==Evaluation==
*Focused exam of access site: inspect, palpate, auscultate for bruit
*Distal pulses and neurovascular exam of affected limb
*Labs: CBC, BMP (creatinine), coagulation studies
*CT abdomen/pelvis with contrast if retroperitoneal hemorrhage suspected
*Duplex US of access site for suspected pseudoaneurysm or AV fistula
*[[ECG]] if chest pain or concern for stent thrombosis
 
==Management==
*Hematoma: Direct pressure, reverse anticoagulation if expanding
*Pseudoaneurysm: US-guided thrombin injection or compression; surgery if failed
*Retroperitoneal hemorrhage: Aggressive fluid resuscitation, blood products, reverse anticoagulation, emergent IR or surgery consult
*Arterial occlusion: Emergent vascular surgery consult, heparin if no contraindication
*Stent thrombosis: Emergent cardiology consult for repeat catheterization
*Hold anticoagulation decisions in consultation with interventional cardiology
 
==Disposition==
*Admit expanding hematomas, retroperitoneal hemorrhage, acute limb ischemia, stent thrombosis
*Small stable hematomas may be observed and discharged with close follow-up


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Acute Arterial Occlusion]]
*[[Acute arterial occlusion]]
*[[Vascular Injury]]
*[[Vascular injury]]
*[[Retroperitoneal hemorrhage]]
*[[Contrast-induced nephropathy]]
 
==References==
<references/>


[[Category:Cards]]
[[Category:Cardiology]]
[[Category:Pulm]]]
[[Category:Procedures]]

Latest revision as of 09:23, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Complications from diagnostic or interventional catheterization (cardiac or peripheral) via femoral, radial, or brachial access
  • Complication rate ~1-2% for diagnostic procedures, higher for interventional
  • Patients typically present to ED within hours to days after discharge from cath lab

Clinical Features

Access Site Complications

  • Hematoma: Most common; swelling, ecchymosis, tenderness at puncture site
  • Pseudoaneurysm: Pulsatile mass with bruit; risk of rupture or compression
  • Arteriovenous fistula: Continuous bruit (machinery murmur) over access site
  • Retroperitoneal hemorrhage: Abdominal pain, back/flank pain, hypotension, dropping hematocrit without visible bleeding — HIGH mortality if missed
  • Arterial thrombosis/occlusion: Cool, pale, pulseless limb distal to access site

Systemic Complications

  • Contrast-induced nephropathy: Rise in creatinine 24-72 hrs post-procedure
  • Cholesterol embolization (blue toe syndrome): Livedo reticularis, blue/purple toes, preserved pedal pulses
  • Stroke: From catheter-related thromboembolism
  • Stent thrombosis: Chest pain, ST changes after recent PCI (especially if antiplatelet therapy was interrupted)
  • Allergic/anaphylactoid reaction: To contrast dye (usually during procedure)
  • Cardiac tamponade: From coronary perforation (rare)

Differential Diagnosis

Evaluation

  • Focused exam of access site: inspect, palpate, auscultate for bruit
  • Distal pulses and neurovascular exam of affected limb
  • Labs: CBC, BMP (creatinine), coagulation studies
  • CT abdomen/pelvis with contrast if retroperitoneal hemorrhage suspected
  • Duplex US of access site for suspected pseudoaneurysm or AV fistula
  • ECG if chest pain or concern for stent thrombosis

Management

  • Hematoma: Direct pressure, reverse anticoagulation if expanding
  • Pseudoaneurysm: US-guided thrombin injection or compression; surgery if failed
  • Retroperitoneal hemorrhage: Aggressive fluid resuscitation, blood products, reverse anticoagulation, emergent IR or surgery consult
  • Arterial occlusion: Emergent vascular surgery consult, heparin if no contraindication
  • Stent thrombosis: Emergent cardiology consult for repeat catheterization
  • Hold anticoagulation decisions in consultation with interventional cardiology

Disposition

  • Admit expanding hematomas, retroperitoneal hemorrhage, acute limb ischemia, stent thrombosis
  • Small stable hematomas may be observed and discharged with close follow-up

See Also

References