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Case: Expert Witness - Vertebral Artery Injection During Spinal Block

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So this is, is a quick, quick example.

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Now here, this is a, a patient

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who had radiculopathy injection was done

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and you, you have to know the flow pattern

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of the injection in this patient.

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Patient developed weakness, respiratory arrest

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or vital signs were unstable.

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Eight hour later scan was obtained

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and the patient had a big, huge cerebellar in fog.

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Uh, so you can see the cerebellar in fog.

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So you have to know really the ate line, right lateral

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to the ate lines are the vertebral artery.

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So when you give the contrast under fluoroscopy, you have

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to know the flow pattern of the contrast.

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It should be at the level and going inferiorly.

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But in this case, the contrast was going more superiorly.

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That should not be happening.

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It was lateral to the ate line.

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It never crossed medial to the insulate line.

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That's a very dangerous pattern of contrast.

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And that's where when it entered into the vertebral artery

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and caused spasm of the vertebral artery

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and the patient had this big huge hemorrhagic infarct

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and ultimately died in six days.

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So this is improper technique used during the procedure.

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So how do we avoid it?

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Whenever you are, especially in the cervical spine,

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make sure that you are in the epidural space

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or whichever space you want to be.

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We usually aspirate, we inject contrast

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before we put in the medicine.

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We if, especially in the cervical spine

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and you are doing under fluoroscopy, make sure you do,

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uh, subtracted images.

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And here's an example.

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You just do a, uh, straight, uh, image

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and you can see a little bit of vascularization and,

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and a good flow in that epidural transforaminal space.

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So if you inject it, it can be catastrophic

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because if you do a DSA image,

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you can now see the anterior spinal artery in that patient.

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And if you had injected in this, this would have had

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devastating outcome for the patient.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Majid Aziz Khan, MD, MBBS

Director, Non-Vascular Spine Intervention

Johns Hopkins University

Mahla Radmard, MD

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Kelly P. Yousem, JD

Plaintiff’s Attorney

Tags

Non-Clinical