2013
DOI: 10.1002/jcu.22050
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A fatal complication of ultrasound‐guided abdominal paracentesis

Abstract: Ultrasound-guided abdominal paracentesis is a procedure that is frequently performed by radiologists for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. This procedure has been shown to be safe with few complications. We report the case of a patient who underwent an ultrasound-guided therapeutic abdominal paracentesis for refractory ascites complicated by intraperitoneal hemorrhage leading to death. This case suggests that ultrasound-guided paracentesis may need to become a more standardized procedure and that in th… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…6 However, in our series, using vascular ultrasound also reduced major bleeding to numbers lower than those historically reported in the literature (0.2%). [3][4] Our preintervention number needed to harm was 333 procedures to cause 1 major bleed, compared to 1250 (or 1666 using the 3-patient bleeding analysis) in the postintervention group. In 2008, 150,000 Medicare beneficiaries underwent paracentesis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6 However, in our series, using vascular ultrasound also reduced major bleeding to numbers lower than those historically reported in the literature (0.2%). [3][4] Our preintervention number needed to harm was 333 procedures to cause 1 major bleed, compared to 1250 (or 1666 using the 3-patient bleeding analysis) in the postintervention group. In 2008, 150,000 Medicare beneficiaries underwent paracentesis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Identification of the precise bleeding site is therefore important to manage intractable PPH. Although the sites of active bleeding can be detected on gray‐scale and color Doppler imaging, the usefulness of sonographic assessment of uterine bleeding sites has not been reported in the context of management of intractable PPH due to uterine atomy. The present case shows that prompt conservative intervention using a Bakri balloon in combination with ultrasonographic visualization of bleeding sites can prevent serious PPH.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[68][69][70] Although uncommon, inadvertent laceration of an inferior epigastric artery or one of its large branches is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. 10,15,69,[71][72][73] A review of 126 cases of rectus sheath hematomas, which most likely occur due to laceration of the inferior or superior epigastric artery, at a single institution from 1992 to 2002 showed a mortality rate of 1.6%, even with aggressive intervention. 74 Besides the inferior epigastric arteries, several other blood vessels are at risk of injury during paracentesis, including the inferior epigastric veins, thoracoepigastric veins, subcostal artery and vein branches, deep circumflex iliac artery and vein, and recanalized subumbilical vasculature.…”
Section: We Recommend the Needle Insertion Site Should Be Evaluated Umentioning
confidence: 99%