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#1 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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What's been everyone else's experiences? As an aside, I've bene playing around with different ways of suturing them in. What does everyone like to do for securing the lines?
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"First comes smiles, then lies. Last is gunfire." |
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#2 | |
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Paranoid and Crotchety...
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for suturing, don't waste your time on the clip most kits have with them. I use 2 sutures in an anchoring fashion. I through one on either side. I'll place a suture parallel to the a-line slightly more proximal then tie to skin. then without cutting anything, I'll wrap around the a-line hub the tie off with tail from first throw. I repeat the process on opposite side. so it kinda looks like this below. | | A
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Don't ever write a check with your mouth you can't cash with your ass. |
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#3 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#4 |
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A lines don't come out because they're not sutured. They come out because the damn line is looped around the thumb and creates a fulcrum for the patient to manipulate it. I don't suture my a lines in, instead I make a tight 180 degree turn on the wrist above the joint and then tape the hell out of it.
You may be interested in this thread |
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#5 | ||
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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My experience? Your gas friends don't talk to non-gas people posting in their forum. I don't get it, but it is what it is. Thought I'd ask the rest of critical care people. They can post in here if they like. I'll talk to them. I promise.
Last edited by jdh71; 11-30-2011 at 05:54 PM. Reason: fixed some spelling |
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#6 |
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Paranoid and Crotchety...
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I think we just described the same thing
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#7 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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I added the "air-knot"
![]() But this one seems to be the most simple and elegant. Plus it keep the hub "in-line" so that it doesn't kink up at the surface. I still wonder if anyone does something different with their suturing. I'm just comfortable going proman style myself. |
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#8 |
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#9 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#10 |
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#11 |
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Jedi Ninja Wizard
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It depends on how good the pulse is, but in general I love ultrasound. In bigger people if there's a good pulse, it would probably take me longer to grab the ultrasound, get the sterile sleeve and do the line under guidance than just putting it in. In my infants or anyone with a bad pulse (especially in the situation you describe), definitely ultrasound FTW.
To suture, I put an anchor stitch proximal to the line, then pull the thread through the wing holes and tie it again. Then tape or tegaderm it down. I think ultrasound can be put to great use in the ICU setting, and we could probably use it much more than we do.
__________________
"There's no use trying," she said: "one can't believe impossible things." "I daresay you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." -- "Through the Looking-Glass" by Lewis Carroll A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools. -Douglas Adams |
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#12 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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Yeah, I see what you did there. The only problem I have is that too many of my patients need that a-line in for longer than a single dressing can be left on. I think if I was sure my art line would come out when I took the take off, then just taping the ****er right would be the best way to go.
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#13 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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My patient population . . . ugh . . .
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#14 |
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Paranoid and Crotchety...
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#15 |
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Sunny and 70
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I'm a Gas/CCM guy who posted in the referenced thread.
I'll put my plug in for the doppler. I like the fact that it gets me in the right plane without having to look at a screen. I just have to find the depth on my own. With doppler and a through and through technique my success rate is pretty high. My $0.02 |
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#16 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#17 | |
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#18 |
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Senior Member
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situational to me. Had a pt needing CVC/A-line, I put in an US guided IJ and then seeing as I already had the US out, I figured I would use it for the a-line to show the med student, couldnt hit the artery twice. Put the probe down, hit it manually first stick. Was a weird day all around though...
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''If you don't know what it is, don't touch it. If you know what it is, you don't need to touch it." |
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#19 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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![]() Art lines are like that. God put art-lines in my life to keep me humble
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#20 |
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EX-TER-MIN-ATE!'
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Had a very strong pulse (can see pulsation on skin)
Had the ultrasound out already for central line was curious what it would look like during a-line so I was using it to see (while the resident putting in the a-line was doing it the old fashion way) ... so it wasn't ultrasound-guided a-line it was interesting to see the artery rotate away from the needle (also like a jet fighter banking away from an incoming missile) now I know why with strong pulses, you have to apply tension to the skin and surrounding structures
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"In medical training, you're expected to do your job, know how to do the job of the person below you (and teach it), and learn how to do the job of the person above you." - lowbudget …Today’s rigid reliance on evidence-based medicine risks having the doctor choose care passively, solely by the numbers. Statistics cannot substitute for the human being before you. - Dr. Jerome Groopman, How Doctors Think. |
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#21 |
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Senior Member
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I often reach for the ultrasound for radial A-lines soon after a just a few failures.
Much like with PIV insertion, going for the radial artery in the traditional spot is often more difficult with ultrasound because the artery is so superficial. I therefore like to insert ultrasound-guided Alines about half way up the forearm in thin folks. I also find it more "stable"/less mobile up there; less running away from my approaching needle. HH |
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#22 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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This is what I've been finding too. |
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#23 |
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Member
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I agree. The radial artery is also much more tortuous when it's superficial. You feel a better pulse because you can compress the artery better against the radial styloid. I tend to be at least 3 cm from the crease of the wrist, blind or US. The few times the surgeons do radial artery grafts I make sure the residents and fellows look at the dissection, it really helps understand the space.
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#24 |
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Senior Member
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stopped suturing a long time ago and use u/s when no pulse for whatever reason (edematous, LVAD etc)
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#25 |
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100% Organic
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#26 | |
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Junior Member
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#27 |
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Member
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JDH, you mentioned putting in a brachial A-line. I've never seen that at my place, as the attendings are wary even of brachial ABGs due to distal ischemia etc. As a med student though, I did brachial ABGs all the time and no one batted an eyelash (of course after failed radial ABGs). What's your take on this? And is it standard to put in brachial a-lines if there's no other choice? (I've put in dorsalis pedis ones, but again, no brachials)
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#28 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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#29 |
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Member
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The brachial and axillary arteries both have enough collateral arteries to be safely used for short term cannulation. I don't do either sites without ultrasound which helps avoid the nerves. The brachial plexus is higher up, at the supraclavicular artery level, the axillary artery does have the radial, median and ulnar nerves surrounding it. The brachial artery does have nerves at risk too, the median and ulnar. We will frequently cover the origin of the left subclavian artery during endovascular stenting of thoracic aorta dissection or aneurysm. Less than 15% of patients develop ischemia, which is pretty remarkable.
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#30 | |
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Junior Member
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#31 | |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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![]() Sorry about your limb ischemia, but that sure looks like an awful lot of arteries around the elbow . . . Anyway, if you guys think the axillary is safe enough, then I'm not going to argue too much. |
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#32 |
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Member
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Well I guess it's attending-dependent then. Which means I probably won't be doing brachials anytime soon anyway. Gotta look it up one of these days though. Thanks!
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#33 |
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2K Member
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A patient of mine went to the OR today for thrombectomy after a brachial a-line from yesterday caused complete distal ischemia. No flow in the radial or ulnar arteries, hand was mottled and pulseless.
It'd be nice to see some data on this but I certainly wouldn't be eager to start one of those anytime soon. |
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#34 |
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si vis pacem, para bellum
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Rethinking my secondary preference for brachials a bit . . . I'd like to see how the gas guys do the axillary. I think I know how I'd do it, but it'd be interesting to see how they position, where they start their look, and where they tend to stick. Nice thing is, even in FAT people there usually not a huge amount of overlying sub-q tissue there.
In other news used the U/S to good effect after the residents beat some poor guy's arm to death - in their defense the guy was 20L+, on a pressor, with a failing liver and high INR. Maybe I should have hopped in sooner, but if you don't let people struggle a little bit in residency they don't grow. Nurse didn't like the number though and told me I'd placed it wrong. Wave form was good, wasn't my fault she was going to ned to go back up on the norepi .
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#35 |
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Junior Member
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I have never done an axillary a-line in the OR so don't know how I would position the pt. there. But in the ICU, I abduct their arm to 90 degrees at the shoulder and then rotate their arm so that their elbow is at 90 degrees and their hand is near the top of the bed. I secure their arm in that position so they don't move. I palpate for the artery 1-2 finger widths distal to the axillary crease and start there, working more proximal if I need to. The artery there is usually pretty large so I haven't had to move around much. Can use U/S if desired. I use a 20ga. 12 cm catheter for these as well as brachials.
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#36 |
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Paranoid and Crotchety...
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You use the 12cm for brachials to? I don't have much experience with brachials, any reason why?
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#37 |
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Junior Member
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I feel like the brachial artery is usually 1-2 cm deep (sometimes more) so if you use a 3.5-4 cm catheter you only have half of the catheter in the artery. This doesn't leave much room for movement/error. Plus the 12cm catheter gives you a better central pressure estimation.
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#38 | |
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Senior Member
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I still use ultrasound for A-lines as I described in my posts above. However, the discussion of the axillary A-line got me thinking of another reason to maybe reach for ultrasound earlier: Nerve injury or pain. When I think of the axillary artery and ultrasound, I think of ultrasound for guided peripheral nerve blocks of the m/r/u and then sliding as needed for musculocutaneous....Trust's post about doing this blind made me think about sticking the needle into one of those three nerves if not using ultrasound...which then made me think of all the times patients have complained of servere pain during blind radial A-lines (yes, I know A-lines hurt)...I wonder if some of those very painful and technically difficult radial A-lines are just blind radial nerve sticks...if you miss just a bit lateral/radial to the radial artery, you are often sticking the radial nerve. Thoughts? HH |
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#39 | |||
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Member
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As for the radial nerve: the nerve proper is much deeper. There are small superficial sensory branches in close proximity to the artery that aren't anything to worry about. I've yet to see the radial nerve on US. |
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#40 |
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Senior Member
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Look just lateral/radial to the artery in short axis next time you place a radial line.
The nerve is the hyperechoic tail extending from the 'head' formed by the round radial artery. Occasionally, it can be a bit difficult to see but usually it is as clear cut. I block the radial (well, mostly me residents do nowadays) all the time for hand. HH Last edited by Hamhock; 01-17-2012 at 11:05 PM. Reason: don't want my images online |
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#41 |
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Member
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Try to upload the image to an image sharing site and then link it. I'd like to see what you're calling the nerve. You describe more of a "wrist block" than a radial nerve block. Proper radial nerve blocks are done at the axillary level, mid-humeral, or elbow.
From Chan's Textbook of Regional Anesthesia: "The radial nerve passes along the front of the radial side of the forearm. It arises first from the lateral side of the radial artery and beneath the supinator muscle. About 3 inches above the wrist, it leaves the artery, pierces the deep fascia and divides into two branches." Radial nerve proper (motor and sensory) at the forearm and wrist is a deep nerve on the dorsum of the wrist. There is a superficial (sensory) branch that runs on the radial side and base of thumb. I doubt these can be visualized on ultrasound. |
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#42 | |
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Senior Member
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I have edited it and removed the link (I hope). Although I am very familiar with Chan's work, I believe that there is a difference between pre-procedural (ie OR) regional anesthesia in the otherwise non-acute patient and the patients we (EM) see in the ED. We (or others on the anesthesiology board) have discussed this previously. Clearly I am not so smooth...at posting images to this board. However, I will try to find within the next few days either published or my unpublished images identifying the (sensory) radial nerve just adjacent to the radial artery (although, I'll admit, it is a bit difficult to identify distally and there is a separation between the artery and nerve). HH |
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#43 |
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somewhere east
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I've used ultrasound twice for this purpose, both times in moribund patients. I prefer grabbing the doppler in tricky cases, as it's usually slightly quicker and I'm impatient. A handful of times, when it's been appropriate, I've resorted to the cath lab trick of topical nitroglycerin over the radial artery to induce some vasodilation. In my experience this has been successful although some of my colleagues find it useless.
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#44 |
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Senior Member
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http://nerveatlas.ucsf.edu/video/RadialV2PhLg_Prog.mov
not the ideal pic I have been trying to get online, but I am struggling to "upload" to a site that is both accessible and does not identify me without a lot of work HH |
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#45 |
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Banned
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Hey!
Axillary artery catheterization through the armpit is associated with nerve injuries and frequent infection. |
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