Abstract

Spontaneous arteriovenous fistulas (AVF), in contrast to iatrogenic or post-traumatic ones, are extremely rare and only sporadically published in the literature. In the absence of exposure risk, the diagnosis of AVF can be challenging, especially if it is an incidental finding. An 80-year-old female patient presented to our vascular consultation because of swelling of the left leg due to varicosis. For years, she had also noticed that the right foot seemed to be cooler. Percutaneous catheter examinations via the groin had not been performed, and she could not remember any groin injuries. Truncal varicosis of the great saphenous vein confirmed clinically and sonographically. In addition, with peripheral pulses obtained, the right foot appeared slightly cooler but not discolored. On auscultation, a systolic-diastolic murmur accompanied by palpable buzzing was heard in the right groin. Color duplex sonography showed a coarse color mosaic pattern between the common femoral artery (AFC) and the anterior saphenous vein (VSAA) in the sense of aliasing ("confetti phenomenon"). A fistula channel between the AFC and VSAA could be visualized, in which very high systolic-diastolic flow velocities prevailed; pulsatile and turbulent flow was present in the region of the crosse-near femoral vein. Endovenous laser ablation was performed for symptomatic truncal varicosis of the left leg. Under ultrasound-guided compression of the afferent artery and fistula at the right groin, the fistula flow did not stop. The patient was reluctant to undergo a proposed interventional closure of the AVF. In follow-up over 4 years, no signs of cardiac insufficiency or critical limb ischemia developed. Spontaneous femoral AVF is a rarity. Characteristic clinical findings lead to a targeted use of color duplex sonography with correct interpretation of artifacts that can otherwise be easily missed.

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