- Joined
- Aug 19, 2006
- Messages
- 2,901
- Reaction score
- 2,359
do anyone have any great no fail tips for IV placement in diff sticks? do you use u/s, NTG? thought some peeps here might have some interesting approaches...
do anyone have any great no fail tips for IV placement in diff sticks? do you use u/s, NTG? thought some peeps here might have some interesting approaches...
i transposed some letters in diff sticks and thought, my god why are placing IV's there?
The main reason why people fail to start IV's is usually because they place the Tourniquet too loose or too far from the IV site.
The other reason is not being able to have good control of the needle while stretching the skin with the other hand.
If you pay attention to these simple things you should nor need something exotic like ultrasound to start an IV more than once every five years.
The main reason why people fail to start IV's is usually because they place the Tourniquet too loose or too far from the IV site.
The other reason is not being able to have good control of the needle while stretching the skin with the other hand.
If you pay attention to these simple things you should not need something exotic like ultrasound to start an IV more than once every five years.
Start all the time above elbow - the basilic vein is easily to be identified (lateral, easy to compress...). Use a sitting position with the patient arm straight and comfortable. Adjust the US machine to the adequate depth. If you have any doubt if this is an artery - use the doppler with correct angulation of the probe. Use a lot of lube. Use a 22 g arterial line kit. Perform the procedure in a similar way with the a line placement. Oh- numb the skin with buffered lido.
I am looking in my digital library and maybe I can post some pictures.
If I'm going to all this trouble, I'll be using the ultrasound to put in a central line instead of a dinky little peripheral 22g, and I guarantee it will take me about the same amount of time or less than futzing around looking for a crummy little peripheral vein with the u/s.
Complications associated with the central line placement?
What about the indications for IV lines placement?
We are talking about peripheral IV access.
When a central line is required - a central line it will be placed.
For a banal appendectomy I will choose a peripheral IV instead of a central line. The time required for the placement is the same. Remember that you have to dress in a sterile gown for your central, use whatever kit, use maybe the same US probe and eventually have a CXR for subclavian or jugular....If you go for a femoral maybe a lawsuit later for infection - soap is not getting there....for some of our patients.
Wouldn't you now choose an US technique?
will the insurance company even pay you if you put in a centeral line for a case that should have just had a peripheral iv?
in truth, probably. Difficult/impossible access is among the indications for central lines (on the anesthesia boards, anyway.) Insurance companies pay for picc lines in difficult access patients, and some of those require placement in IR, which would be just as pricey.
In the big picuture, from a cost control standpoint, the extra hour you spend trying to get access leads to the hospital losing much more money than the cost of a central line kit and placement, as an open OR and unoccupied OR staff (surgeon, scrub tech, circulating nurse) await your patient.
external jugular. then no need for central line, less likely to carotid puncture (assuming you're not using ultrasound).
If you're in a big hurry, or lose the access you already have at a critical point, can use the feet in a pinch. (though nurses hate it, presumed bigger infection risk, and they need to hep lock it before the patient walks)
external jugular. then no need for central line, less likely to carotid puncture (assuming you're not using ultrasound).
If you're in a big hurry, or lose the access you already have at a critical point, can use the feet in a pinch. (though nurses hate it, presumed bigger infection risk, and they need to hep lock it before the patient walks)
Unfortunately the druggies also know these tips and trash all the good veins, then the not-so-good veins, then the bad veins thus leaving you the ****-for-veins. You mustn't have a very large IVDA population. Ultrasound guided deep peripherals are magic.
Only used U/S twice for PIV's but it was needed. The other night had a super-fatty for an appy from the ED. Showed up with a 20ga in her AC (well, kind of in her AC, the catheter was over half out of the skin.) We needed some access but didn't really need central access. Went to sleep with half out IV and then started looking. Hands were so fat that I couldn't feel anything so attending said get U/S and look in AC. Lady was so fat with her arm straight attending had to retract the fat so I could get U/S probe into AC fossa to even look. Found one and stuck it. U/S has it's place for PIV, just not very often.
😱I've heard of a guy who did a whole case using the dorsal vein of the penis. Pt was IVDU, said it would work, and it did.
my point being by the time it takes one to prepare for an US guided IV insertion, any adequate to above-adequate IV inserter doesn't need an US nor 3-5 minutes to get an IV (and that's with equipment at the ready.) i'm just sayin is all...
i transposed some letters in diff sticks and thought, my god why are placing IV's there?