Affiliation:
1. Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Basel , Petersgraben 4, Basel 4031 , Switzerland
2. Department of Cardiology, Medizinische Universitätsklinik , Kantonsspital Baselland, Rheinstrasse 26, Liestal 4410 , Switzerland
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Guidewire fracture and loss is a rare but well-known and feared complication of percutaneous coronary interventions. With the increasing number of complex coronary interventions and procedures for chronic total occlusions, operators face new challenges and boundaries, and the need for solutions to otherwise rare complications is increasing.
Case summary
We have developed a simple and practical method for retrieving fractured and lost guidewires, called the ‘knuckle-twister’ technique. This article summarizes seven cases in which guidewires lost in the coronary vasculature have been successfully removed and describes this technique in detail. The goal was to gather different clinical scenarios: free wire lost in situ, wire jailed behind stent struts, wire in small branches, part of the wire protruding into the aorta, ‘invisible’ guidewire microfilaments/coils, etc.
Discussion
The innovation of the knuckle-twister consists in folding a polymer-jacketed guidewire and transforming it into an open lasso that tightens when twisted. In vitro, its grip strength and pulling force was tested and exceeded 1.5 kg. Moreover, in all in vivo cases, the lost material could be efficiently and quite rapidly retrieved with this simple and highly reproducible technique.
Key clinical message
Broken guidewires that were lost in the coronary vasculature can be safely retrieved with this novel and simple technique requiring no special safety equipment.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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