Patient: Male, 35-year-old Final Diagnosis: Thrombosis Symptoms: Pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Infectious Diseases • Medicine, General and Internal • Psychiatry Objective: Background: Case Report: Conclusions: Unusual clinical course A predictable consequence of long-term injection drug use is the destruction of the native venous system; as a consequence, people who inject drugs may eventually move to injection into skin and subcutaneous tissue, wounds, muscles, and arteries. These practices put people who inject drugs at risk for injection-related soft-tissue infection, vascular damage, ischemia, and compartment syndrome, all of which have overlapping pre-senting symptoms. A 35-year-old man who injects drugs presented with foot swelling and discoloration initially concerning for necrotizing fasciitis or compartment syndrome. After progression despite appropriate antimicrobial and surgi-cal treatment for soft-tissue infection, he was diagnosed with arterial insufficiency and resultant distal isch-emia. This diagnosis was discovered only after obtaining additional history of the patient’s drug use practices. Just prior to his symptoms, he had unintentionally injected a formed thrombus into his dorsalis pedis artery. Intra-arterial injection of drugs can cause ischemia through a variety of mechanisms, including direct vessel trauma, arterial spasm, toxicity from the drug of abuse or an adulterant, embolism of particulate matter, and as proposed here, direct injection of preformed thrombus. Medical providers should be aware of the steps of injection drug use and their associated risks so that they can ask appropriate questions to focus their dif-ferential diagnosis, increase their understanding of common or current local injection practices, and develop rapport with the patient. Patient education on safe injection techniques may also reduce the risk of serious complications.
CITATION STYLE
Maldarelli, M. E., Traver, E. C., Norcross, G., Gann, D., Kattakuzhy, S., Welsh, C., & Schmalzle, S. A. (2021). Acute limb ischemia caused by inadvertent arterial drug self-injection: A case report. American Journal of Case Reports, 22(1). https://doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.932903
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