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Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization

BACKGROUND: Thrombosis is the most common complication during cardiac catheterization via femoral artery access. Alongside heparinization, fibrinolytic therapy is recommended if there are signs of ischemia in the lower extremity. OBJECTIVES: Given the paucity of data in the existing literature on st...

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Autores principales: Mortezaiyan, Hojjat, Aarabi-Moghadam, Mohammadyosef, Asadpour, Nabiollah, Parchami-Ghazaee, Sepideh, Khalili, Yasaman, Vahidshahi, Kourosh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Kowsar 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4253749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25478527
http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/cardiovascmed.13552
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author Mortezaiyan, Hojjat
Aarabi-Moghadam, Mohammadyosef
Asadpour, Nabiollah
Parchami-Ghazaee, Sepideh
Khalili, Yasaman
Vahidshahi, Kourosh
author_facet Mortezaiyan, Hojjat
Aarabi-Moghadam, Mohammadyosef
Asadpour, Nabiollah
Parchami-Ghazaee, Sepideh
Khalili, Yasaman
Vahidshahi, Kourosh
author_sort Mortezaiyan, Hojjat
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Thrombosis is the most common complication during cardiac catheterization via femoral artery access. Alongside heparinization, fibrinolytic therapy is recommended if there are signs of ischemia in the lower extremity. OBJECTIVES: Given the paucity of data in the existing literature on streptokinase (SK) therapy in pediatrics, we designed this study to assess the efficacy of SK in pediatric patients with diagnosed femoral artery thrombosis following cardiac catheterization. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study population initially consisted of 1788 pediatric patients who underwent cardiac catheterization via the femoral artery access. Diminished or absent pulses in the lower extremity were detected in 123 patients, 45 of whom (2.5% of 1788) required treatment and were therefore considered for the next stage of study. Treatment was comprised of post-procedural intravenous heparin, either 50 U/kg/Q4h or 10 - 20 U/kg/h continuously. After heparinization for 24 hours, if the pulse of the affected extremity was not palpable, heparin therapy was continued (heparin-treated group, n = 28), and if the symptoms of femoral artery ischemia were persistent, heparin was discontinued and intravenous SK with a loading dose of 2000 U/kg over 20 - 30 minutes was commenced (SK-treated group, n =17). RESULTS: In the presence of pulselessness in the lower extremity, a maintenance dose of SK (1000 U/kg/h, during 1 - 24 hours) was intravenously administered. Regarding the return of the pulses post-therapeutically, normal and weak/absent pulses were detected in seven (25.2%) and 21 (74.8%) of the 28 patients, respectively, in the heparin-treated group (P value < 0.001), whereas normal and weak/absent pulses were detected in 15 (88.2%) and two (11.8%) of the 17 patients, respectively, in the SK-treated group (P value < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrated a high success rate and a low complication rate for systemic SK therapy in femoral artery thrombosis after catheterization.
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spelling pubmed-42537492014-12-04 Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization Mortezaiyan, Hojjat Aarabi-Moghadam, Mohammadyosef Asadpour, Nabiollah Parchami-Ghazaee, Sepideh Khalili, Yasaman Vahidshahi, Kourosh Res Cardiovasc Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Thrombosis is the most common complication during cardiac catheterization via femoral artery access. Alongside heparinization, fibrinolytic therapy is recommended if there are signs of ischemia in the lower extremity. OBJECTIVES: Given the paucity of data in the existing literature on streptokinase (SK) therapy in pediatrics, we designed this study to assess the efficacy of SK in pediatric patients with diagnosed femoral artery thrombosis following cardiac catheterization. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study population initially consisted of 1788 pediatric patients who underwent cardiac catheterization via the femoral artery access. Diminished or absent pulses in the lower extremity were detected in 123 patients, 45 of whom (2.5% of 1788) required treatment and were therefore considered for the next stage of study. Treatment was comprised of post-procedural intravenous heparin, either 50 U/kg/Q4h or 10 - 20 U/kg/h continuously. After heparinization for 24 hours, if the pulse of the affected extremity was not palpable, heparin therapy was continued (heparin-treated group, n = 28), and if the symptoms of femoral artery ischemia were persistent, heparin was discontinued and intravenous SK with a loading dose of 2000 U/kg over 20 - 30 minutes was commenced (SK-treated group, n =17). RESULTS: In the presence of pulselessness in the lower extremity, a maintenance dose of SK (1000 U/kg/h, during 1 - 24 hours) was intravenously administered. Regarding the return of the pulses post-therapeutically, normal and weak/absent pulses were detected in seven (25.2%) and 21 (74.8%) of the 28 patients, respectively, in the heparin-treated group (P value < 0.001), whereas normal and weak/absent pulses were detected in 15 (88.2%) and two (11.8%) of the 17 patients, respectively, in the SK-treated group (P value < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrated a high success rate and a low complication rate for systemic SK therapy in femoral artery thrombosis after catheterization. Kowsar 2014-02-24 2014-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4253749/ /pubmed/25478527 http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/cardiovascmed.13552 Text en Copyright © 2014, Rajaie Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran; Published by Kowsar Corp. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mortezaiyan, Hojjat
Aarabi-Moghadam, Mohammadyosef
Asadpour, Nabiollah
Parchami-Ghazaee, Sepideh
Khalili, Yasaman
Vahidshahi, Kourosh
Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title_full Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title_fullStr Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title_short Treatment of Femoral Artery Thrombosis with Streptokinase and Heparin After Cardiac Catheterization
title_sort treatment of femoral artery thrombosis with streptokinase and heparin after cardiac catheterization
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4253749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25478527
http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/cardiovascmed.13552
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