Abstract

Carotid arterial injuries occur in 5-6% of persons with penetrating trauma. Complete transection is rare in civilian practice and is most often due to penetrating injuries. Complete transection as an iatrogenic complication is rare. We present a case where we were required to repair a complete transection of the carotid artery with segmental loss which occurred as an iatrogenic complication during thyroidectomy. We could find no previous reports of this type of iatrogenic complication. The lessons learned during the management of this case were the following: (1) surgeons should call for help early, (2) a multidisciplinary approach ensures that all options are considered, (3) adhere to surgical principles of proximal and distal control, (4) always use atraumatic clamps to control vessels, and (5) flow restoration should be attempted, leaving carotid ligation as the last resort.

Highlights

  • Carotid artery (CA) injuries occur in 5-6% of persons with penetrating neck trauma [1, 2]

  • There were no previous reports of this type of iatrogenic complication

  • Complete transections are uncommon as iatrogenic CA injuries

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Carotid artery (CA) injuries occur in 5-6% of persons with penetrating neck trauma [1, 2].

Report of a Case
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call