Kudos to Callie: This is Why We Teach Complications!

Without training to recognize and treat complications, someone could get hurt. Perhaps seriously. A Toronto woman was lucky her problem was spotted by a THMA Consulting colleague who sure knows now the importance of learning about risks and complications.

It was only by chance that Callie Dunne RN saw what the woman’s face looked like. It was four days after she had an injection treatment to soften her nasolabial folds. And at least two other injectors didn’t see the problem before Callie was shown her photo.

Stock photo: classic vascular occlusion

“With the bruising and white patches near the fold and on her nose, I could tell she had obvious signs of vascular occlusion,” Callie told me. “And I said she should do something about this immediately. She needs more treatment, she needs hyaluronidase. And right away.”

A vascular occlusion is when the hyaluronic acid filler is inadvertently injected into the blood vessel, interrupts blood flow and can cause breakdown tissue. Two things can then happen.

If the vessel is occluded at the point of injection then the surrounding area becomes discoloured and or mottled in appearance.  Tissue breakdown, or necrosis, may occur which can result in facial scarring.

The product might also travel through the blood vessel and lodge anywhere along the vessel pathway. A worse case scenario, though extremely rare, would be the product could occlude a vessel in the back of the eye and cause blindness.

It’s dangerous in any case. But that’s why all practitioners should be trained to recognize and treat complications.

In this Toronto patient’s case, at least two injectors didn’t have that safety knowledge.

Kudos to Callie: This is Why We Teach Complications!