Successful Coil Embolization of a Large Anterior Tibial Artery Pseudoaneurysm After Open Reduction Internal Fixation of a Bi-condylar Tibial Plateau Fracture.
Jasmine J ParkLuke D PerryDanielle TamburriniSanjay KumarPublished in: The American surgeon (2023)
Pseudoaneurysms are false aneurysms that consist of turbulent blood flow between the outside layers of the arterial wall, the tunica media and tunica adventitia. Typically, pseudoaneurysms develop after injury to an artery, most often as a result of blunt trauma. Femoral pseudoaneurysms can also develop after catheter-based vascular interventions due to laceration of the artery from access needles, insufficient time or pressure held at the access site after the procedure, amongst other causes. Rarely, arterial injury during orthopedic pinning procedures has been known to cause pseudoaneurysms. There are only two documented cases within the literature in which a patient underwent closed intermedullary nailing of a proximal tibia fracture after trauma and developed an anterior tibial artery pseudoaneurysm. There are few reports of pseudoaneurysm development as the result of external fixation device placement presumably caused by the inability to directly visualize internal anatomy.