Abstract

A woman aged 70 years was transferred from another medical centre to our hospital because of shortness of breath, hemoptysis, and ischemic changes in the right foot (Fig. 1A). She had chronic renal failure and had been enrolled in a hemodialysis treatment program for 6 years. Transesophageal echocardiography showed a guidewire in the right atrium and right ventricle, with multiple mobile thrombi attached to it. The guidewire entered the right atrium through the superior vena cava, passed into the right ventricle through the lateral tricuspid valve annulus, and then looped in the right ventricle. One of the thrombi was entrapped within a patent foramen ovale and oscillated between right and left atria (Fig. 1B; Video 1 ; view video online). Pulmonary computed tomography angiography showed emboli in the segmental artery of the right lower lobe and a subsegmental artery of the left lower lobe. Because of the precarious state of the patient and the risk of further emboli, it was decided to take the patient for emergency cardiac surgery. The intracardiac guidewire and multiple thrombi were removed successfully (Fig. 1C). Unfortunately, because of multiple comorbidities, hemodynamic instability, and profound acidosis, she died on the second postoperative day. Vascular interventional procedures are widely used, resulting in increased complication rates. Guidewire loss may lead to thrombosis, embolism, sepsis, arrhythmia, or perforation. Loss of a complete guidewire is a rarely reported complication. Percutaneous retrieval is the preferred treatment, with low complication and high success rates. Various devices and techniques, such as loop snares, 2-wire or triplewire technique, basket retrievers, special catheters, grasping

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