Percutaneous Vascular Closure Using an Anchored Collagen Plug Provides Effective Haemostasis Following both Antegrade and Retrograde Femoral Arterial Punctures
Male
Punctures
Hemostatics
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Risk Factors
Catheterization, Peripheral
Humans
Femoral artery puncture
Vascular closure device
Aged
Retrospective Studies
Medicine(all)
Aged, 80 and over
Hemostasis
Chi-Square Distribution
Hemostatic Techniques
Angio-Seal
Middle Aged
Angiography/angioplasty
3. Good health
Femoral Artery
Radiology Information Systems
Treatment Outcome
Female
Collagen
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
DOI:
10.1016/j.ejvs.2014.04.017
Publication Date:
2014-05-27T22:02:25Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Small published series suggest a higher failure rate for Angio-Seal vascular closure device (VCD) deployment after antegrade femoral puncture, despite the need for shorter haemostasis times, early discharge, and possibly higher turnover. We seek to compare the deployment efficacy and complications of the Angio-Seal VCD between antegrade and retrograde femoral arterial deployments.Radiological data was retrospectively analysed from prospective databases from the hospitals' Computerised Radiology Information System (CRIS) over 2010-2012. Angio-Seal gauge, Rutherford class (as applicable), puncture mode (used to classify deployment as antegrade/retrograde), sheath sizes, and deployment success/failures were recorded. Numerical/statistical analyses were undertaken using Microsoft Excel 10/SISA software.A total of 519 Angio-Seal VIP VCDs were deployed in 470 patients over 2010-2012 (13 other patients could not be analysed due to incomplete data). Sheath sizes for antegrade/retrograde femoral puncture were 5F, n = 22/9; 6F, n = 244/223; 7F, n = 1/5; 9F, n = 4/0. 8F Angio-Seal VIPs were used for 9F punctures only, 6F for the remainder. The overall deployment success rate was 93.7%. In total, 247 (91.1%) successful antegrade deployments were undertaken with 24 (8.9%) failures, compared with 229 (96.6%) successful retrograde deployments with eight (3.4%) failures. Antegrade/retrograde failures were classed as failure to deploy, n = 15/5; bleeding despite successful deployment requiring supplementary compression, n = 6/1; haematoma formation, n = 2/1; groin pain, n = 0/1; vessel stenosis, n = 1/0. Higher deployment failures were noted with antegrade deployment (p < .02, chi-square test).Angio-Seal deployment is successful for both antegrade/retrograde femoral punctures albeit with a higher antegrade failure rate.
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