Pulmonary artery bullet embolism-Case report and review.

Int J Surg Case Rep

Department of Surgery, San Joaquin General Hospital, French Camp, CA, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bullet embolism is a rare but serious problem that can happen when a bullet gets stuck in a blood vessel after an injury, causing big health risks.
  • In one case, a patient had a bullet travel from their leg vein to their lung artery, and doctors decided to just watch him instead of doing surgery.
  • When someone has injuries with more entry wounds than exit wounds, doctors should check for bullet embolism; if they're not showing any symptoms, it might be safe to just monitor them.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Bullet embolism, an uncommon but serious complication of penetrating vascular trauma, poses a unique clinical challenge for the trauma physician. Migration of bullets can lead to infection, thrombosis, ischemia, hemorrhage and death.

Presentation Of Case: We report a patient in whom a bullet embolized from the left femoral vein to the right pulmonary artery, a situation ultimately managed by observation alone.

Discussion: Bullet embolism should be suspected when the number of penetrating entry wounds exceeds the number of exit wounds. Patients with radiographic studies showing a bullet outside the established trajectory require further evaluation. Most bullet emboli are arterial, and are generally symptomatic presenting with early signs of ischemia. Venous emboli are less common, and they are generally asymptomatic. Most venous bullet emboli travel in the direction of the blood flow and may lodge in the pulmonary arterial tree causing serious complications. Management of bullet emboli in the pulmonary arterial tree remains controversial and specific guidelines have not been clearly established. However, the available data in the literature suggest that pulmonary artery embolism can be observed in the asymptomatic patient.

Conclusion: Symptomatic pulmonary bullet emboli should be managed with endovascular retrieval when available or operative therapy. Asymptomatic intravascular bullet emboli may be managed conservatively as seen in our patient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3731686PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijscr.2013.02.017DOI Listing

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