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Radiation‐induced skin ulcer and rib fractures following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI): A case of right back skin ulcer and adjacent rib fractures after single PCI
10
Citations
7
References
2015
Year
EngineeringRadiation EffectSkin UlcerRadiation ExposureChronic UlcerInterventional RadiologySurgeryRadiation-induced Skin UlcerPainful Skin UlcerRadiation ImagingRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineRadiologyHealth SciencesEmergency RadiologyAdjacent Rib FracturesRib Fracture ManagementChest InjuryRadiation EffectsRib Fractures
We experienced a 75-year-old male patient with a refractory and severely painful skin ulcer on the right back. He had suffered from ischemic heart disease and undergone percutaneous coronary intervention 5 months prior to the consultation with us. The characteristic clinical appearance, location of the lesion and his past medical history led us to the diagnosis of radiation-induced skin ulcer. Magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography as well as bone scintigraphy showed fractures of the right back rib adjacent to the ulcer, which was thought to be attributable to bone damage due to X-ray radiation and/or persistent secondary inflammation of the chronic ulcer. In the published work, there are no other reports of bone fractures associated with radiation dermatitis after coronary interventional radiology.
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