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- Attending Physician
I think for cardiac cases, brachial a-lines (or axillary if needed) give a much better estimation of central aortic pressures than radial a-lines. Especially when on high dose vasopressors or inotropes. I have taken care of multiple pt's whose brachial or axillary pressure reading was markedly higher than their radial a-line reading even when not on vasopressors. I don't always trust radial pressures as much in severe vasculopathic pt's. Not to say that I don't put in radial a-lines on them, but if something doesn't seem right I have a lower tolerance to start checking other sites for BP confirmation.
I see brachial artery access being used more and more frequently at other institutions. I head from someone applying for a CT fellowship that at CC, fellows shoot for the brachial aline first. I always thought brachials were taboo. Ive seen many dusky hands in the ICU but I've seen it with axillary and radials as well.
Whats it like at other institutions?
It's taboo at my place. I've seen attendings go for femoral and even DP before they even considered brachials. I don't get it.
They probably don't want to break out the ultrasound.😉
We use the brachial for difficult preemie alines. Though, I always worry about perfusion off the hand. Not that long ago we had an amputation from sepsis and a clotted radial aline. (placed elsewhere) I've never seen that before.
Cheers!
Do most people place them with sterile gloves, or just use regular gloves without touching the puncture site/catheter tip? I've been at two places, one did the former and the other the latter.




I'm waiting for the dudes out there advocating this type of B.S. to make their pre op nurses gown and drape for IV placement!![]()
I'm gonna start going full gown and glove and sterile prep of the airway prior to intubation. Seems like we'd probably have less VAP that way....
Put on one of those ortho space suits just to be safe.
Any evidence that suturing actually accomplishes anything? I never suture but also never wrap the tubing around the thumb (ie create a pivot).
I'm gonna start going full gown and glove and sterile prep of the airway prior to intubation. Seems like we'd probably have less VAP that way....