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Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis

BACKGROUND: The ergotamine tartrate associated with certain categories of drugs can lead to critical ischemia of the extremities. Discontinuation of taking ergotamine is usually sufficient for the total regression of ischemia, but in some cases it could be necessary thrombolytic and anticoagulant th...

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Autores principales: Cervi, Edoardo, Bonardelli, Stefano, Battaglia, Giuseppe, Gheza, Federico, Maffeis, Roberto, Nodari, Franco, Maroldi, Roberto, Giulini, Stefano M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3180257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21878097
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-9-13
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author Cervi, Edoardo
Bonardelli, Stefano
Battaglia, Giuseppe
Gheza, Federico
Maffeis, Roberto
Nodari, Franco
Maroldi, Roberto
Giulini, Stefano M
author_facet Cervi, Edoardo
Bonardelli, Stefano
Battaglia, Giuseppe
Gheza, Federico
Maffeis, Roberto
Nodari, Franco
Maroldi, Roberto
Giulini, Stefano M
author_sort Cervi, Edoardo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The ergotamine tartrate associated with certain categories of drugs can lead to critical ischemia of the extremities. Discontinuation of taking ergotamine is usually sufficient for the total regression of ischemia, but in some cases it could be necessary thrombolytic and anticoagulant therapy to avoid amputation. CASE REPORT: A woman of 62 years presented with a severe pain left forearm appeared 10 days ago, with a worsening trend. The same symptoms appeared after 5 days also in the right forearm. Physical examination showed the right arm slightly hypothermic, with radial reduced pulse in presence of reduced sensitivity. The left arm was frankly hypothermic, pulse less on radial and with an ulnar humeral reduced pulse, associated to a decreased sensitivity and motility. Clinical history shows a chronic headache for which the patient took a daily basis for years Cafergot suppository (equivalent to 3.2 mg of ergotamine). From about ten days had begun therapy with itraconazole for vaginal candidiasis. The Color-Doppler ultrasound shown arterial thrombosis of the upper limbs (humeral and radial bilateral), with minimal residual flow to the right and no signal on the humeral and radial left artery. RESULTS: Angiography revealed progressive reduction in size of the axillary artery and right humeral artery stenosis with right segmental occlusions and multiple hypertrophic collateral circulations at the elbow joint. At the level of the right forearm was recognizable only the radial artery, decreased in size. Does not recognize the ulnar, interosseous artery was thin. To the left showed progressive reduction in size of the distal subclavian and humeral artery, determined by multiple segmental steno-occlusion with collateral vessels serving only a thin hypotrophic interosseous artery. Arteriographic findings were compatible with systemic drug-induced disease. The immediate implementation of thrombolysis, continued for 26 hours, with heparin in continuous intravenous infusion and subsequent anticoagulant therapy allowed the gradual disappearance of the symptoms with the reappearance of peripheral pulses. CONCLUSION: Angiography showed regression of vasospasm and the resumption of flow in distal vessels. The patient had regained sensitivity and motility in the upper limbs and bilaterally radial and ulnar were present.
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spelling pubmed-31802572011-09-27 Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis Cervi, Edoardo Bonardelli, Stefano Battaglia, Giuseppe Gheza, Federico Maffeis, Roberto Nodari, Franco Maroldi, Roberto Giulini, Stefano M Thromb J Case Report BACKGROUND: The ergotamine tartrate associated with certain categories of drugs can lead to critical ischemia of the extremities. Discontinuation of taking ergotamine is usually sufficient for the total regression of ischemia, but in some cases it could be necessary thrombolytic and anticoagulant therapy to avoid amputation. CASE REPORT: A woman of 62 years presented with a severe pain left forearm appeared 10 days ago, with a worsening trend. The same symptoms appeared after 5 days also in the right forearm. Physical examination showed the right arm slightly hypothermic, with radial reduced pulse in presence of reduced sensitivity. The left arm was frankly hypothermic, pulse less on radial and with an ulnar humeral reduced pulse, associated to a decreased sensitivity and motility. Clinical history shows a chronic headache for which the patient took a daily basis for years Cafergot suppository (equivalent to 3.2 mg of ergotamine). From about ten days had begun therapy with itraconazole for vaginal candidiasis. The Color-Doppler ultrasound shown arterial thrombosis of the upper limbs (humeral and radial bilateral), with minimal residual flow to the right and no signal on the humeral and radial left artery. RESULTS: Angiography revealed progressive reduction in size of the axillary artery and right humeral artery stenosis with right segmental occlusions and multiple hypertrophic collateral circulations at the elbow joint. At the level of the right forearm was recognizable only the radial artery, decreased in size. Does not recognize the ulnar, interosseous artery was thin. To the left showed progressive reduction in size of the distal subclavian and humeral artery, determined by multiple segmental steno-occlusion with collateral vessels serving only a thin hypotrophic interosseous artery. Arteriographic findings were compatible with systemic drug-induced disease. The immediate implementation of thrombolysis, continued for 26 hours, with heparin in continuous intravenous infusion and subsequent anticoagulant therapy allowed the gradual disappearance of the symptoms with the reappearance of peripheral pulses. CONCLUSION: Angiography showed regression of vasospasm and the resumption of flow in distal vessels. The patient had regained sensitivity and motility in the upper limbs and bilaterally radial and ulnar were present. BioMed Central 2011-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3180257/ /pubmed/21878097 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-9-13 Text en Copyright ©2011 Cervi et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Cervi, Edoardo
Bonardelli, Stefano
Battaglia, Giuseppe
Gheza, Federico
Maffeis, Roberto
Nodari, Franco
Maroldi, Roberto
Giulini, Stefano M
Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title_full Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title_fullStr Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title_full_unstemmed Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title_short Upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
title_sort upper limb artery segmental occlusions due to chronic use of ergotamine combined with itraconazole, treated by thrombolysis
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3180257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21878097
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-9-13
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