Stent grafts in patients with carotid blowout syndrome: Outcome and antiplatelet therapy in preventive versus emergency cases

Kornelia Kreiser, Isabell Gröber, Claus Zimmer, Katharina Storck

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Carotid blowout syndrome due to tumor infiltration, fistulas, and therapy-related necrosis can occur as late as years after the treatment. Reporting our experiences with preventive and acute treatment with stent grafts and discussing different ways of antiplatelet therapy. Methods: We reviewed all patients between 2010 and 2016 who underwent stent graft placement and analyzed outcome, complications, and antiplatelet regime. Results: Seventeen patients were treated in 24 sessions (n = 7 threatened, n = 5 imminent, and n = 12 acute bleeding). The antiplatelet regime covered the entire range from aspirin only to loading doses of aspirin/clopidogrel, perioperative heparin, and aspirin/clopidogrel for 12 months followed by lifelong aspirin. Rare complications were not associated with the preprocedural or periprocedural but were associated with the postprocedural antiplatelet regime. Conclusion: Most complications of stent graft implantations due to a carotid blowout syndrome occur postprocedurally: rare thrombotic events are linked to not taking a medication and frequent rebleedings may be reduced by an earlier reduction of dual-antiplatelet to mono-antiplatelet therapy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2521-2527
Number of pages7
JournalHead and Neck
Volume40
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2018

Keywords

  • antiplatelet therapy
  • bleeding
  • carotid blowout syndrome
  • drug regime
  • stent graft

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