Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis

Balloon angioplasty can cause shear stress and tear of the vascular endothelium during mechanical dilatation, leading to increased inflammation and coagulation reactions of the vascular endothelium. Herein, a worst case of active rheumatoid vasculitis is described, where due to progressing ischemic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jong Kwon Park
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Medrang 2018-06-01
Series:Vascular Specialist International
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.vsijournal.org/journal/view.html?doi=10.5758/vsi.2018.34.2.39
id doaj-c947781e15524895a2a4344c03005171
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c947781e15524895a2a4344c030051712020-11-25T00:31:14ZengMedrang Vascular Specialist International2288-79702018-06-01342394310.5758/vsi.2018.34.2.39vsi.2018.34.2.39Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid VasculitisJong Kwon Park0Department of Surgery, Haeundae Paik Hospital, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, KoreaBalloon angioplasty can cause shear stress and tear of the vascular endothelium during mechanical dilatation, leading to increased inflammation and coagulation reactions of the vascular endothelium. Herein, a worst case of active rheumatoid vasculitis is described, where due to progressing ischemic necrosis of the leg, endovascular intervention was unavoidably performed in the presence of active rheumatoid vasculitis. After percutaneous balloon angioplasty, the patient developed recurrent thrombotic occlusion of the leg arteries, and finally, limb amputation resulted in despite vigorous treatment including medication, immunosuppression, catheter-directed thrombolysis, and post-thrombolysis anticoagulation. This case report indicates that endovascular intervention may be detrimental to the active rheumatoid vasculitis. Until the development of treatment guideline to prevent or control inflammatory reaction, endovascular intervention for the active rheumatoid vasculitis may not be appropriate as a first line therapy even though there is progressing ischemic necrosis.http://www.vsijournal.org/journal/view.html?doi=10.5758/vsi.2018.34.2.39Endovascular interventionRheumatoid vasculitisThrombosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jong Kwon Park
spellingShingle Jong Kwon Park
Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
Vascular Specialist International
Endovascular intervention
Rheumatoid vasculitis
Thrombosis
author_facet Jong Kwon Park
author_sort Jong Kwon Park
title Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
title_short Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
title_full Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
title_fullStr Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
title_full_unstemmed Detrimental Effects of Endovascular Intervention in Active Rheumatoid Vasculitis
title_sort detrimental effects of endovascular intervention in active rheumatoid vasculitis
publisher Medrang
series Vascular Specialist International
issn 2288-7970
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Balloon angioplasty can cause shear stress and tear of the vascular endothelium during mechanical dilatation, leading to increased inflammation and coagulation reactions of the vascular endothelium. Herein, a worst case of active rheumatoid vasculitis is described, where due to progressing ischemic necrosis of the leg, endovascular intervention was unavoidably performed in the presence of active rheumatoid vasculitis. After percutaneous balloon angioplasty, the patient developed recurrent thrombotic occlusion of the leg arteries, and finally, limb amputation resulted in despite vigorous treatment including medication, immunosuppression, catheter-directed thrombolysis, and post-thrombolysis anticoagulation. This case report indicates that endovascular intervention may be detrimental to the active rheumatoid vasculitis. Until the development of treatment guideline to prevent or control inflammatory reaction, endovascular intervention for the active rheumatoid vasculitis may not be appropriate as a first line therapy even though there is progressing ischemic necrosis.
topic Endovascular intervention
Rheumatoid vasculitis
Thrombosis
url http://www.vsijournal.org/journal/view.html?doi=10.5758/vsi.2018.34.2.39
work_keys_str_mv AT jongkwonpark detrimentaleffectsofendovascularinterventioninactiverheumatoidvasculitis
_version_ 1725322897371693056