Metal stents are a valuable treatment modality for patients with biliary obstruction.
However, we present here two patients whose cases may serve as a warning about an
unusual complication associated with these stents. We encountered this complication
after endoscopic retrograde cholangiography for obstructed metal biliary stents. The
first patient, an 87-year-old man with a benign biliary stricture, failed to regain
consciousness after clearing of his stent using a Dormia basket and balloon catheter.
Cerebral air embolism was diagnosed on cerebral computed tomography, and transesophageal
echocardiography revealed a patent foramen ovale as a precipitating factor for paradoxical
air embolism. He survived and was discharged with a residual hemiparesis. In the second
patient, a 54-year-old man who had a history of a Billroth II operation and chronic
pancreatitis and who had a portal cavernoma with biliary obstruction due to collateral
veins, electromechanical dissociation complicated the balloon-catheter stent revision.
Echocardiography performed during cardiopulmonary resuscitation showed major air embolism
to the right heart. The patient died. These cases demonstrate that air may gain access
to the venous system during therapeutic endoscopic procedures of this type. It is
likely that the large diameter of metal stents and the potential for these stents
to lacerate venous structures facilitate the entry of air into the venous circulation,
an event which may have life-threatening consequences.
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C. Rabe, M.D.
Department of Medicine I · University of Bonn
Sigmund-Freud-Strasse 25 · D-53105 Bonn · Germany
Fax: +49-228-287-4698
eMail: rabe@uni-bonn.de