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Journal Article
[Case of Central Venous Catheter Laceration of the Pectoralis Minor Muscle].
Gan to Kagaku Ryoho. Cancer & Chemotherapy 2016 December
A 50's underwent gastrectomy for gastric cancer 4 years before. He had received chemotherapy for para-aortic lymph node metastases. A central venous catheter with a subcutaneous port was implanted via the right subclavian vein, under ultrasonographic guidance, 1 year 3 months earlier. The patient complained of swelling in his right chest during intravenous injection of ramucirumab and paclitaxel via the port. A chest radiograph revealed that a catheter fracture. A CT scan showed that the fractured catheter had lacerated the pectoralis minor muscle and the tip was in the right inferior pulmonary artery. The catheter fragment was removed using a pigtail catheter and a snare catheter via a percutaneous transfemoral approach, without any complication. The catheter was cut at 15.5 cm from the tip. This fracture was thought to be caused by a kink in the pectoralis muscle.
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