Editorial Type:
Article Category: Case Report
 | 
Online Publication Date: Jan 01, 2018

Facial Artery Pseudoaneurysm: Challenges of Airway Management

MD,
MD, and
DDS
Page Range: 52 – 55
DOI: 10.2344/anpr-65-02-09
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A patient with recent jaw reconstruction presented for treatment of postoperative oropharyngeal hemorrhage. Asleep nasal fiberoptic intubation was attempted, but a rare and unanticipated complication ensued: rupture of right facial artery pseudoaneurysm. The difficult airway algorithm was followed up to the point of surgical airway. While nasal or oral fiberoptic intubation is often perceived as the safest approach for management of a difficult airway, we discuss alternative treatment strategies for patients with a facial pseudoaneurysm. Such alternatives include preoperative angiographic endovascular embolization of the vessel(s) feeding the pseudoaneurysm, and/or elective tracheostomy.

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Copyright: © 2018 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
<bold>Figure 1</bold>
Figure 1

Computed tomography angiogram significant for a small, 2 × 1 cm pseudoaneurysm originating off of a branch of the right external carotid artery with active extravasation of blood.


<bold>Figure 2</bold>
Figure 2

Sequence of events in management of this patient's difficult airway.


<bold>Figure 3</bold>
Figure 3

Oral and maxillofacial surgeon applies digital pressure to the facial artery to temporize bleeding, while surgical colleague performs tracheostomy.


<bold>Figure 4</bold>
Figure 4

Clips applied to the facial artery via an open surgical approach; note its superficial and easily accessible location.


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Dr Roman Dudaryk, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine/Ryder Trauma Center, 1800 NW 10th Avenue, T-239, Miami, FL 33156; rdudaryk@miami.edu.
Received: Jun 30, 2017
Accepted: Aug 27, 2017