Ultraschall Med 2012; 33(7): E355-E356
DOI: 10.1055/s-0032-1325325
Case Report
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Spontaneous Active Bleeding in Thoracoacromial Artery Diagnoses by Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound – a Case Report

Diagnose einer aktiven Spontanblutung der Brust-Schulter-Arterie mittels kontrastverstärkter Sonografie – ein Fallbericht
P. Tombesi
,
F. Di Vece
,
E. Salviato
,
R. Galeotti
,
S. Sartori
Further Information

Publication History

18 April 2012

02 August 2012

Publication Date:
21 September 2012 (online)

Acute arterial bleeding can often result in severe blood loss and life-threatening shock. Therefore, it is mandatory to rapidly diagnose the bleeding and assess its severity to plan the appropriate therapeutic strategy. Internal bleeding often results from injuries caused by trauma or interventional procedures such as biopsy needle puncture or percutaneous radiofrequency ablation (Hong-Ping S et al. J Ultrasound Med 2009; 28: 955 – 958; Matono T et al. Hepatology 2012; 2: 649 – 650). However, some patients can present spontaneous active bleeding. Anticoagulant therapy increases the risk of both traumatic and spontaneous bleeding, in particular in elderly patients.

We report a case of a patient with non-traumatic subclavicular hematoma and acute anemia, in which contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) enabled to detect spontaneous active bleeding from right thoracoacromial artery.