A cannula for venous access was placed in the antecubital fossa of a 60-year-old man
for the delivery of analgesia and sedation during colonoscopy, and 5 mg midazolam
and 50 mg pethidine were injected. The patient complained about heat, burning, and
ongoing pain in his right forearm. The skin of the forearm was red, with some white
spots similar in appearance to hives. After an infusion system was connected to the
cannula, it became evident that there was backflow of arterial blood, and it was realized
that the cannula had been placed in a small artery. Immediate infusion of 20 mL of
0.9 % saline solution, 10 mL of lidocaine 0.5 %, and 20 000 units/24 hours of heparin
into the involved artery resulted in symptomatic relief within 8 hours and there were
no negative sequelae.
Accidental intra-arterial injection of these drugs can lead to severe tissue damage,
resulting in compartment syndrome, gangrene, and amputation [1]
[2]. Although there are no specific guidelines for the management of unintended arterial
drug injection, some successful strategies can be gleaned from published case reports
[3]
[4]. The management should include dilution of the drug in the arterial vasculature,
vasodilation to counteract vasospasm, and anticoagulation to prevent thrombosis. A
combination of vasodilators (calcium-channel blockers, iloprost, papaverine, lidocaine),
sympathetic nerve plexus blockade, and anticoagulant/thrombolytic agents (heparin,
urokinase, tissue plasminogen activator, platelet aggregation/thrombokinase inhibitors)
have circumvented the need for surgical fasciotomy or thrombectomy in the past [3].
There are a number of recommended precautions that should ensure safe venous access
and avoid unintentional intra-arterial drug injection [3]
[5] and these are illustrated in [Figures 1] and [2]. Because pain is a typical symptom of inadvertent arterial injection, health personnel
should be particularly aware of patients who might not be able to report this symptom
and who are therefore at increased risk (such as unconscious, pediatric, or mentally
handicapped patients). We think that this report is noteworthy because it is possible
that most endoscopists are not aware of this rare complication and are also not familiar
with the management of this emergency situation.
Figure 1 Precautions for safe venous access. A blood pressure cuff should be used instead of
a tourniquet because a tight tourniquet can suppress arterial pulsation. The cannula
should not be closed with a screw cap. Always connect an infusion system to the cannula
because this will reveal any backflow of arterial blood.
Figure 2 Avoid the marked “danger” areas, which have been reported to have a prevalence of
abnormal arteries of 1% - 14% [3]. The brachial artery and the basilic vein can be very close together in the antecubital
fossa. Abnormal arteries are not infrequently encountered in the forearm, where arterial
branches from the radial and ulnar arteries sometimes form a superficial vascular
network. Alternatively, veins on the dorsum of the hand or foot can be used to gain
venous access, but, even there, unintended intra-arterial injections have been described
[5]. In cases where there has been unintentional intra-arterial injection of drugs,
associated with severe tissue damage, the cannula should not be removed from the involved
artery and a vascular surgeon should be consulted.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CPL_1AN_2AB