Case Overview
A 68-year-old man with significant comorbidities, including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, heart failure, and chronic kidney disease, developed acute neurological collapse immediately following removal of a right internal jugular central venous catheter.
Within minutes, he experienced sudden headache, altered consciousness, and paraplegia, followed by focal neurological deficits. Brain CT demonstrated multiple cortical venous air emboli, visualized as serpiginous hypodensities along the frontoparietal sulci. Subsequent MRI revealed extensive ischemic infarction in the right middle and posterior cerebral artery territories.
Despite prompt supportive management—including high-flow oxygen and antiseizure therapy—the patient deteriorated rapidly, developing refractory status epilepticus and ultimately died following a goals-of-care transition.
Why This Case Matters
This case underscores several critical and practice-changing insights:
Venous air is not always benign—it can serve as a precursor to devastating arterial cerebral ischemia
No intracardiac shunt required—transpulmonary passage or overwhelmed pulmonary filtration may allow arterial embolization
Retrograde cerebral venous air embolism is likely underrecognized, particularly with internal jugular access
High-risk patients (frailty, pulmonary disease, prolonged catheter dwell time) are especially vulnerable
Imaging sequence is key—CT may capture venous air, while MRI later reveals arterial infarction
Notably, the timeline on page 3 clearly illustrates the rapid progression from catheter removal to neurological collapse and death within hours, emphasizing the fulminant nature of this complication.
Mechanistic Insight
This case provides compelling support for a venous-to-arterial injury cascade, likely involving:
Retrograde ascent of air into cerebral venous circulation
Transpulmonary passage of microbubbles
Microvascular obstruction and endothelial injury leading to ischemia
Importantly, a negative bubble study does not exclude clinically significant arterial consequences, particularly in patients with impaired pulmonary filtration capacity.
Clinical Take-Home Message
Acute neurological deterioration immediately following CVC manipulation or removal should prompt urgent evaluation for cerebral air embolism, even in the absence of classic risk factors or intracardiac shunt.
Question
Which mechanism best explains arterial cerebral infarction following venous air embolism in the absence of a cardiac shunt?
A. Direct arterial catheterization
B. Retrograde venous flow alone
C. Transpulmonary passage of air bubbles
D. Septic embolization
Correct Answer: C. Transpulmonary passage of air bubbles
Explanation: When pulmonary filtration is impaired—as in pulmonary fibrosis—venous air emboli can traverse the pulmonary circulation and enter the arterial system. Additionally, large embolic loads may overwhelm normal filtration mechanisms, allowing systemic dissemination and cerebral ischemia despite a negative bubble study.
Final Thoughts
This case serves as a sobering reminder that even routine procedures such as central line removal can precipitate catastrophic neurological outcomes. Vigilance, risk stratification, and meticulous technique remain essential—but equally important is early recognition of this rare, often fatal complication.
Journal of Medical Case Reports is the world’s first international, PubMed-listed, medical journal devoted to publishing case reports from all medical disciplines and will consider any original case report that expands the field of general medical knowledge, and original research relating to case reports.