• BMJ case reports · Apr 2014

    Case Reports

    An endless line on the chest radiograph.

    • Allan Lee, Kenneth Lau, and Stephen Stuckey.
    • Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Monash Health, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
    • BMJ Case Rep. 2014 Apr 10; 2014.

    AbstractA 40-year-old male patient had his right femoral vein catheterised following admission with altered conscious state from polypharmacy overdose. The procedure was documented as successful and uncomplicated. A postprocedural chest radiograph demonstrated a linear metallic opacity projecting over the superior vena cava and inferior vena cava (SVC and IVC, respectively), with superior and inferior ends not visualised. This did not alert the attending radiologist and intensivist who might have assumed such a metallic object to be external to the patient. Only the central line was removed prior to patient discharge 2 days later. The patient died 2 years later from unrelated streptococcal pneumonia complicated by septicaemia and multiorgan failure. The postmortem discovered a central venous guidewire in the IVC across the right atrium into SVC.

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