Crimping and Repositioning of a Maldeployed Balloon-Expandable Arterial Stent Using a Gooseneck Snare

Purpose: To describe a technique for repositioning a fully deployed iliac stent from the infrarenal aorta into the common iliac artery (CIA). Case Report: A 58-year-old man was undergoing treatment for a significant right CIA stenosis when a 7times24-mm Palmaz Genesis medium stent was mistakenly dep...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of endovascular therapy 2005-04, Vol.12 (2), p.247-251
Hauptverfasser: Portugaller, Horst R., Pabst, Edmund, Doerfler, Otto C., Tauss, Josef, Zangrando, Mario, Pilger, Ernst, Klein, Guenther E.
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container_end_page 251
container_issue 2
container_start_page 247
container_title Journal of endovascular therapy
container_volume 12
creator Portugaller, Horst R.
Pabst, Edmund
Doerfler, Otto C.
Tauss, Josef
Zangrando, Mario
Pilger, Ernst
Klein, Guenther E.
description Purpose: To describe a technique for repositioning a fully deployed iliac stent from the infrarenal aorta into the common iliac artery (CIA). Case Report: A 58-year-old man was undergoing treatment for a significant right CIA stenosis when a 7times24-mm Palmaz Genesis medium stent was mistakenly deployed in the infrarenal aorta. With the stent still over the guidewire, an 8times60-mm balloon catheter was placed coaxially in the stent. Via a left groin access, a 6-F vascular sheath was introduced retrograde, and a 2.5-cm Amplatz gooseneck snare was advanced into the infrarenal abdominal aorta and pulled back over the stent. The snare was tightly closed to crimp the stent onto the collapsed balloon; this maneuver was repeated several times until the stent was contracted along its entire length. The balloon/stent assembly was carefully pulled back into the right CIA, and the stent was deployed across the target lesion, although there was overlap of the left CIA. Color duplex sonography at 1 year showed no signs of significant iliac arterial stenoses on either side. The patient reported no claudication. Conclusions: Using a gooseneck snare, fully deployed balloon-expandable iliac stents can be recrimped on a balloon.
doi_str_mv 10.1583/04-1455.1
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Case Report: A 58-year-old man was undergoing treatment for a significant right CIA stenosis when a 7times24-mm Palmaz Genesis medium stent was mistakenly deployed in the infrarenal aorta. With the stent still over the guidewire, an 8times60-mm balloon catheter was placed coaxially in the stent. Via a left groin access, a 6-F vascular sheath was introduced retrograde, and a 2.5-cm Amplatz gooseneck snare was advanced into the infrarenal abdominal aorta and pulled back over the stent. The snare was tightly closed to crimp the stent onto the collapsed balloon; this maneuver was repeated several times until the stent was contracted along its entire length. The balloon/stent assembly was carefully pulled back into the right CIA, and the stent was deployed across the target lesion, although there was overlap of the left CIA. Color duplex sonography at 1 year showed no signs of significant iliac arterial stenoses on either side. The patient reported no claudication. 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subjects Angioplasty, Balloon - adverse effects
Angioplasty, Balloon - instrumentation
Angioplasty, Balloon - methods
Humans
Iliac Artery
Intermittent Claudication - diagnostic imaging
Intermittent Claudication - therapy
Intraoperative Complications - therapy
Male
Medical Errors
Middle Aged
Radiography
Stents
title Crimping and Repositioning of a Maldeployed Balloon-Expandable Arterial Stent Using a Gooseneck Snare
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