Forearm Compartment Syndrome due to Transradial PCI in STEMI: Case Series of What Can Go Wrong and Lesson Learned

Authors

  • Rismarini Asanti Department of Emergency Medicine, Siloam Diagram Heart Center, Depok City, West Java, Indonesia
  • Sidhi Laksono Department of Cardiology and Vascular Medicine, Siloam Diagram Heart Center, Depok city, West Java, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47144/phj.v56i3.2599

Abstract

The trans-radial approach (TRA) is shown to be superior in reducing bleeding complications and associated with lower mortality with a similar procedural success rate in ST-Elevated Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) patients compared to the trans-femoral approach. Nevertheless, complications such as forearm hematoma and, in rare cases, acute compartment syndrome (ACS) may develop, thus requiring a prompt surgical procedure. Here, we present two successful emergency fasciotomy cases as ACS treatment following primary percutaneous coronary intervention after STEMI. Both patients show normal neurological and muscular function and normal artery flow on both hands afterward.

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Published

2023-09-30

How to Cite

1.
Asanti R, Laksono S. Forearm Compartment Syndrome due to Transradial PCI in STEMI: Case Series of What Can Go Wrong and Lesson Learned. Pak Heart J [Internet]. 2023Sep.30 [cited 2024Sep.29];56(3):243-7. Available from: https://pakheartjournal.com/index.php/pk/article/view/2599