Anatomical variation of femoral vessels and ultrasound‐guided femoral vein puncture for catheter ablation of arrhythmias

Author:

Guan Wenchi1ORCID,Li Xiaofeng1,Chen Keping1,Yao Yan1ORCID,Liu Jun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fuwai Hospital Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College Beijing People's Republic of China

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis study aims to investigate the anatomical variations in femoral vasculature and evaluate the clinical value of ultrasound‐guided femoral vein puncture in catheter ablation procedures.MethodsIn this retrospective analysis conducted from January 2023 to March 2023, we examined data from patients who underwent catheter ablation with ultrasound‐guided femoral venipuncture. We evaluated the anatomy of the femoral vasculature at both high and low inguinal levels. Based on the relationship between the femoral vein and artery, we classified the anatomy into four types: Type I (vein parallel to artery without overlap), Type II (vein medial to artery with lumen overlap ≤50%), Type III (vein posterior to artery with lumen overlap > 50%), and Type IV (vein lateral to artery). Additionally, we assessed procedure‐related vascular complications that required interventions or prolonged hospital stays.ResultsA total of 254 patients were included in this study. At the upper inguinal level, most cases (92.5%) exhibited Type II, followed by Type I (6.5%), while Type III (0.6%) and IV (0.4%) were less common. At the lower inguinal level, Type II accounted for 70.7%, there was a significantly higher proportion of Type III (23.4%) and Type IV (5.9%). The overall complication rate was 0.4%, no pseudoaneurysm or hematoma was observed in our study.ConclusionOur study revealed significant anatomical variations in the relationship between the femoral vein and femoral artery. Ultrasound‐guided femoral venipuncture significantly reduced vascular complication rate, making it a valuable tool for guiding puncture procedures.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine

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