Femoral artery is the most common vascular access site used for angiographic interventions. Various complications such as hematoma, bleeding, dissection, arteriovenous fistula and pseudoaneurysm have been described following iatrogenic puncture. However, angiosarcoma formation at the access site is very uncommon and it poses a diagnostic dilemma due to its resemblance to organized hematoma. A 75-year-old patient who had undergone coronary angiography has suffered from an angiosarcoma and its vascular complications due to local invasion at the puncture site. Although the tumor was completely excised and flow was re-established, he was lost 17 months later because of multiple metastases and their complications. Presence of a persistent mass with vascular complaints should raise suspicion for this rare and aggressive type of tumor.
Keywords: angiosarcoma, femoral artery, puncture siteCopyright © 2024 Archives of the Turkish Society of Cardiology