
- With Mayo Clinic cardiologist
Martha Grogan, M.D.
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Martha Grogan, M.D.
Martha Grogan, M.D.
Dr. Martha Grogan is board-certified in internal medicine and cardiovascular diseases. She is a native of Cincinnati, Ohio, and received her medical degree from Northwestern University Medical School. Dr. Grogan has been on staff at Mayo Clinic since 1995 and is a consultant in the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and is an assistant professor of medicine at Mayo Medical School.
Dr. Grogan is a noninvasive cardiologist specializing in heart failure, adult congenital heart disease and echocardiography. She has witnessed firsthand the importance of patient education in the treatment of diseases such as congestive heart failure and is excited about the tremendous educational opportunities now available through the Internet.
Question
Pseudoaneurysm: What causes it?
What causes a pseudoaneurysm? Should a pseudoaneurysm always be treated?
Answer
from Martha Grogan, M.D.
A pseudoaneurysm, sometimes called a false aneurysm, is a dilated artery or blood vessel. A pseudoaneurysm can form after an artery or heart chamber is injured causing blood to leak and pool outside the artery's wall. In a true aneurysm, the artery or vessel is enlarged, but the enlargement doesn't result from an injury and blood flows normally through the aneurysm.
A pseudoaneurysm may be a complication of cardiac catheterization, a procedure in which a catheter is inserted in an artery in your groin (femoral artery) and is threaded through your blood vessels to your heart. Cardiac catheterization is used to capture images of your heart to diagnose heart disease and to treat certain types of heart disease. A pseudoaneurysm can occur if blood leaks and pools outside your femoral artery where it was punctured when the catheter was inserted. Pseudoaneurysms can also occur in other arteries throughout the body related to either surgery or trauma, or from the rupture of an aneurysm.
Pseudoaneurysms can also occur in the heart chambers, such as the left ventricle, after damage from a heart attack causes blood to leak and pool outside the injured heart muscle.
If a pseudoaneurysm of a femoral artery related to cardiac catheterization is small, it may go undetected and not cause any complications. But if a small pseudoaneurysm is detected, your doctor may recommend a watchful-waiting approach to see if it resolves on its own. However, most often, when a femoral artery pseudoaneurysm is detected, your doctor will recommend one of these treatments:
- Ultrasound-guided compression repair. In this treatment, your doctor will look for your pseudoaneurysm using ultrasound imaging. Once the pseudoaneurysm is found, your doctor presses on it to release the built-up blood.
- Ultrasound-guided medications. Your doctor may recommend having a dose of blood clot-forming medication (thrombin) injected into your pseudoaneurysm to treat it by causing the pooled blood to clot. The medication is injected into the pseudoaneurysm after it's found using ultrasound imaging.
- Surgery. If your doctor doesn't think either ultrasound-guided treatment will work, he or she may recommend surgery to correct it.
- Crawford MH. Current Diagnosis & Treatment: Cardiology. 3rd ed. New York, N.Y.: The McGraw-Hill Companies; 2009. http://www.accessmedicine.com/resourceTOC.aspx?resourceID=8. Accessed Aug. 22, 2012.
- Carrozza JP. Complications of diagnostic cardiac catheterization. http://www.uptodate.com/index. Accessed Aug. 22, 2012.
- Grogan M (expert opinion). Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. Aug. 30, 2012.


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