As with any surgical procedure, complications are possible, but major complications due to thin-needle aspiration biopsies are fairly uncommon, and when complications do occur, they are generally mild. The kind and severity of complications depend on the organs from which a biopsy is taken or the organs gone through to obtain cells. After the procedure, mild analgesics are used to control post-operative pain. Aspirin or aspirin substitutes should not be taken for 48 hours after the procedure (unless aspirin is prescribed for a cardiac or neurological condition). Since sterility is maintained throughout the procedure,
infection is rare. But should an infection occur, it will be treated with
antibiotics.
Bleeding is the most common complication of this procedure. A slight bruise may also appear. If a
lung or
kidney biopsy has been performed, it is very common to see a small amount of blood in
sputum or
urine after the procedure. Only a small amount of bleeding should occur. During the observation period after the procedure, bleeding should decrease over time. If more bleeding occurs, this will be monitored until it subsides. Rarely, major surgery will be necessary to stop the bleeding. Other complications depend upon the body part on which the biopsy takes place: • Lung biopsies are frequently complicated by
pneumothorax (collapsed lung). This complication can also accompany biopsies in the upper
abdomen near the base of the lung. About a quarter to half of patients having lung biopsies will develop pneumothorax. Usually, the degree of collapse is small and resolves on its own without treatment. A small percentage of patients will develop a pneumothorax serious enough to require hospitalization and a
chest tube. Although it is impossible to predict in whom this will occur, collapsed lungs are more frequent and more serious in patients with severe emphysema and in patients in whom the biopsy is difficult to perform. • For
biopsies of the liver,
bile leakages may occur, but these are quite rare. •
Pancreatitis (inflammation of the
pancreas) may occur after biopsies in the area around the pancreas. • In biopsies in the area of the breast, bleeding and bruising may occur, less frequently also infection (rarely) or (very rarely, and only if performed near the chest wall)
pneumothorax. • Deaths have been reported from needle aspiration biopsies, but such outcomes are extremely rare. ==Criticism==