Migration of a Contraceptive Subdermal Device Into the Lung

Cureus. 2023 Nov 2;15(11):e48179. doi: 10.7759/cureus.48179. eCollection 2023 Nov.

Abstract

Subdermal contraceptive implants are usually inserted subdermally and carry the possibility to migrate within a small range, usually less than 2 cm from the insertion sites; significant migration over 2 cm is rare. This paper discusses the case of a 38-year-old female patient with a migrated subdermal Implanon contraceptive implant in the left pulmonary artery. On chest computed tomography, roughly a 4 cm long linear hyperdensity foreign body in the left lower lobe was found and was favored to be a migrated Implanon in a subsegmental pulmonary artery branch. An interventional radiologist performed an endovascular removal of the left pulmonary artery Implanon using a right common femoral vein access. Very few cases have been reported of complications with inserting and removing the subdermal contraceptive implants as it is considered a reasonably safe procedure in the hands of physicians familiar with the technique. Therefore, if a properly trained individual had carried out the correct procedure of inserting a subdermal implant, the migration of an implant over 2 cm should not occur.

Keywords: cardiology; contraceptive implant; drug implant; foreign-body migration; lung.

Publication types

  • Case Reports