Int J Angiol 2001; 10(2): 144-148
DOI: 10.1007/BF01616422
Original Articles

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Upper thoracic veins' patency in pacemaker implantation in behcet's disease: Diagnosis by echo-doppler and isotopic angiography

Malka Yahalom1 , Nathan Roguin1 , Jacqueline Jerushalmi2 , Ivan Noi3 , Amitai Bickel4 , Elliot A. Milgram5
  • 1Department of Cardiology Pacemaker Unit and Heart Institute, Western Galilee Hospital, Nahariya, Israel and Technion Faculty of Medicine, ttaifa, Israel
  • 2Department of Nuclear Medicine Pacemaker Unit and Heart Institute, Western Galilee Hospital, Nahariya, Israel and Technion Faculty of Medicine, ttaifa, Israel.
  • 3Department of Radiology Pacemaker Unit and Heart Institute, Western Galilee Hospital, Nahariya, Israel and Technion Faculty of Medicine, ttaifa, Israel.
  • 4Department of Surgery Pacemaker Unit and Heart Institute, Western Galilee Hospital, Nahariya, Israel and Technion Faculty of Medicine, ttaifa, Israel.
  • 5Department of Pediatrics, Pacemaker Unit and Heart Institute, Western Galilee Hospital, Nahariya, Israel and Technion Faculty of Medicine, ttaifa, Israel.
Presented in part at the 36th Annual World Congress of the International College of Angiology.
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
24 April 2011 (online)

Abstract

Recurrent vasculitis and vein thrombosis, including involvement of the superior vena cava, are serious complications of Behcet's disease, and may present an obstacle during implantation of permanent endocardial transvenous pacemaker and/or automatic defibrillator. Six male patients, known to suffer from Behcet's disease, who required pacemaker and/or defibrillator therapy were investigated. Both invasive (phlebography) and non-invasive (echo-Doppler and isotopic angiography) vascular imaging techniques were available. In one patient, total occlusion of the upper thoracic veins was demonstrated by angiography. In a second patient, following implanted defibrillator, partial left subclavian vein obstruction was demonstrated by the two noninvasive methods. In the remaining four patients, patency of the upper thoracic veins was demonstrated, prior to and following pacemaker implantation, by the two noninvasive methods, with a good correlation. As echo-Doppler or isotopic angiography are widely available, easy to perform and reproducible, it is suggested that upper thoracic vein patency in patients with Behcet's disease should be evaluated prior to and following such vascular procedure, by one of these methods, in order to prevent unnecessary attempts to cannulate obstructed or stenosed vessels.