<?xml version="1.0"?>
<Articles JournalTitle="Archives of Anesthesiology and Critical Care">
  <Article>
    <Journal>
      <PublisherName>Tehran University of Medical Sciences</PublisherName>
      <JournalTitle>Archives of Anesthesiology and Critical Care</JournalTitle>
      <Issn>2423-5849</Issn>
      <Volume>10</Volume>
      <Issue>2</Issue>
      <PubDate PubStatus="epublish">
        <Year>2023</Year>
        <Month>12</Month>
        <Day>27</Day>
      </PubDate>
    </Journal>
    <title locale="en_US">Surgical Extraction of Residual CVC Guide Wire after One Year: Case Report</title>
    <FirstPage>198</FirstPage>
    <LastPage>200</LastPage>
    <AuthorList>
      <Author>
        <FirstName>Malihe</FirstName>
        <LastName>Sehat</LastName>
        <affiliation locale="en_US">Department of Anesthesiology, Shahid Beheshti Hospital, School of Medicine, Qom University of Medical Sciences, Qom, Iran.</affiliation>
      </Author>
      <Author>
        <FirstName>Abbas</FirstName>
        <LastName>Ahmadi</LastName>
        <affiliation locale="en_US">Department of Anesthesiology, Shahid Beheshti Hospital, School of Medicine, Qom University of Medical Sciences, Qom, Iran.</affiliation>
      </Author>
    </AuthorList>
    <History>
      <PubDate PubStatus="received">
        <Year>2023</Year>
        <Month>04</Month>
        <Day>27</Day>
      </PubDate>
      <PubDate PubStatus="accepted">
        <Year>2023</Year>
        <Month>06</Month>
        <Day>25</Day>
      </PubDate>
    </History>
    <abstract locale="en_US">Complete remaining guide wire in the vascular system after CVC is very rare. For which the maximum symptom-free reporting time in studies was five months, and in our case, the patient was symptom-free for one year. The only finding was one session complaining of ear pain and mastoid tenderness two weeks after catheter placement.
A 42-year-old male patient with the diagnosis of necrotizing pancreatitis and a retroperitoneal abscess was a candidate for laparotomy after ERCP. The patient was a candidate for central venous catheter insertion through the internal jugular vein before the surgery in the operating room by a third-year anesthesia resident. After one year, discovered that incidentally remaining guide wire during a follow-up MRI before pancreatitis. Which has been asymptomatic during this period. And despite the risk of rupture of the right heart and blood vessels due to possible fibrosis due to a long stay in the cardiovascular system, it is successfully removed by an endovascular surgeon.
The main reasons for the incident were the non-observance of scientific and safety principles at the time of catheter insertion and the failure to perform CXR after that.</abstract>
    <web_url>https://aacc.tums.ac.ir/index.php/aacc/article/view/745</web_url>
  </Article>
</Articles>
