Is Ligation an Option after Gunshut Injury of the Subclavian Artery ?

C l i n M e d International Library Citation: Akkas Y, Kocer B, Gulbahar G, Gundogdu AG, Ozkurt B (2016) Is Ligation an Option after Gunshut Injury of the Subclavian Artery?. Int J Surg Res Pract 3:038 Received: January 12, 2016: Accepted: March 16, 2016: Published: March 18, 2016 Copyright: © 2016 Akkas Y, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Akkas et al. Int J Surg Res Pract 2016, 3:038


Discussion
Only about 15% of the subclavian artery injury cases are lucky enough to reach a hospital setting [3].
Imaging methods may be used for the diagnosis of subclavian artery injury [2,3].Angiography was performed postoperatively, and it was important for the demonstration of the collateral vasculature supplying the distal arterial system.Different surgical approaches are preferred depending on the traumatized part of the artery in subclavian artery injury cases [2,3].We preferred infraclavicular approach in our case because of the localization of the injury.The primary surgical principle is repair by end to end anastomosis in subclavian artery injury.If a graft is needed for repair, the first choice is saphenous vein interposition.Synthetic grafts may also be used since the risk of infection is low due to the rich vascular supply of the area [1][2][3][4].For the graft interposition, the two ends of the vasculature must be clean and in good shape.Ligation may be performed for cases in which the hemodynamic state of the patient is critically poor or when the injury is in the distal part of the subclavian artery [5].Recently, endovascular stent implantation is performed, provided that the injury area is suitable and the rupture is incomplete [6].Iyisoy et al. reported 42 year-oldwoman with left subclavian artery occlusion in Behcet disease.In this

Introduction
Subclavian artery injury is rare.The diagnosis and treatment is difficult because of the complexity of the anatomic location [1,2].We would like to present this case to emphasize the importance of rapid and accurate diagnosis leading to lifesaving emergent surgical approach.

Case Report
A 30 year old male patient was taken to the emergency department after suffering from a gunshot wound.The pulse rate was 130/min, arterial blood pressure was 80/50 mmHg and the respiratory rate was 30/min.On physical examination, there was a bullet entry wound on the posterior aspect of the right shoulder, and there was a bullet exit wound on the anterior aspect of the chest wall at the level of the fourth intercostal space and the midclavicular line on the right side.There was pulsatile blood discharge from the bullet exit wound (Figure 1).The right radial arterial pulse was palpable.The portable posteroanterior chest X-ray revealed no hemopneumothorax.The patient was taken to emergent surgery because of the poor hemodynamic state, pulsatile blood discharge from the right anterior chest wall and hematoma development in the right pectoral area.Initially subclavian artery injury was not suspected since the right radial pulse was palpable and the bullet exit wound was located on the fourth intercostal space.So the incision was started at

Abstract
We would like to present this case to emphasize on the importance of rapid and accurate diagnosis leading to lifesaving emergent surgical approach.A 30 year-old male patient was taken to the emergency department after suffering from a gunshot wound.He had right subclavian artery injury.Right subclavian artery was ligated through an infraclavicular incision.The subclavian artery angiography, which was performed postoperatively, demonstrated the right axillary artery to be supplied by the collateral vasculature.The patient was discharged on the seventh postoperative day.Subclavian artery ligation may be performed for this kind of cases in which the hemodynamic state of the patient is critically poor or when the injury is in the distal part of the subclavian artery, if we can achieve positive radial signal from the doppler examination.

ISSN: 2378-3397
Akkas et al.Int J Surg Res Pract 2016, 3:038 case the saphaneous vein graft was placed between the left and right subclavian arteries [7].Ozturk et al. reported 82-year-old-woman with subclavian artery dissection and rupture after the transcatheter aortic valve implantation procedure with axillary artery approach.In this case the right subclavian artery was ligated and a rapid surgical anastomosis with a dacron graft to the right subclavian-left subclavian was performed [8].In our case, we had to ligate the subclavian artery because on our exploration the subclavian artery was found to have complete rupture and the two ends of the ruptured segments were found to have been destroyed due to the blast effect, the injury was in the distal part of the subclavian artery, the hemodynamic state of the patient was very poor being about to bleed to death and the Doppler US of the radial artery revealed distal flow pattern.
Brachial plexus damage may be left unrepaired due to emergent surgery need and the poor hemodynamic state of the patient [2,9].In our case, the poor hemodynamic state of the patient did not let us repair the brachial plexus.
The mortality rate is 8-10% even in the most experienced centers in subclavian artery injury cases [9].In our case we avoided mortality by means of rapid diagnosis and the appropriate surgical technique performed, although the hemodynamic state of the patient was unstable and he suffered from cardiopulmonary arrest.

Conclusion
Subclavian artery ligation may be performed for this kind of cases in which the hemodynamic state of the patient is critically poor or when the injury is in the distal part of the subclavian artery if we can achieve positive radial signal from the doppler examination.

Figure 1 :
Figure 1: Bullet entry wound on the right shoulder, bullet exit wound on the anterior chest wall at the level of the fourth intercostal space and infraclavicular incision are seen.

Figure 2 :
Figure 2: Occluded distal end of the right subclavian artery and the collateral supply of the right upper extremity are seen angiographically.