Patient Transfer with Kocher Forceps on the Axillary Artery: A Rare Case of Ongoing Iatrogenic Vascular Injury.
Charalampos SeretisAndreas L TsimpoukisAndreas GeorgiakakisPanagiotis M KitrouEleftheria PanteliSpyros I PapadoulasPublished in: Vascular specialist international (2022)
Iatrogenic trauma of the axillary artery by non-vascular surgeons can occur during various general surgical procedures such as resection of soft tissue tumors or axillary lymph node clearance. Prompt recognition, appropriate initial management, and rapid transfer to a tertiary vascular surgery service, if needed, are key steps to ensuring patient safety. Here we present a case of iatrogenic axillary artery injury during the resection of a recurrent soft tissue tumor in a local hospital. The desperate application of a Kocher clamp on the bleeding axillary artery by the operating general surgeons controlled the bleeding but led to further arterial damage. The patient was transferred to our tertiary hospital, where the arterial injury was repaired using a vein interposition graft. Apart from the encountered intraoperative technical challenges, this case highlights the need for broader training of nonvascular specialist surgeons on the core principles of basic vascular surgical techniques and oncovascular surgery.
Keyphrases
- lymph node
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- sentinel lymph node
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- soft tissue
- rare case
- minimally invasive
- ultrasound guided
- healthcare
- atrial fibrillation
- case report
- early stage
- thoracic surgery
- oxidative stress
- radiation therapy
- locally advanced
- acute coronary syndrome
- surgical site infection
- rectal cancer
- percutaneous coronary intervention