Intravenous Port Catheter Embolization: Mechanisms, Clinical Features, and Management:

2008 
Venous catheters are important therapeutic devices for the administration of fluid and chemotherapeutic agents; however, their use may be associated with serious complications, such as catheter rupture and embolism. Most data on port catheter embolization consist of isolated case reports; only a few studies have examined a large number of patients with port catheter embolism. The purpose of this study was to identify the incidence of clinical symptoms in patients with catheter dislocation and to determine the role of catheter fragment localization in combination with the presenting symptoms. We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients admitted to Martin-Luther University Hospital Center from January 1994 to September 2005. In total, 41 patients with centrally dislocated catheter fragments were analyzed. Most catheter fragments were located in the pulmonary artery, superior vena cava, and right atrium. Of the patients in whom the catheter fragments were located in the right atrium, right ventricle, a...
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