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how many central lines should I have half way through my intern year in surgery?
There is NO correct answer to this. Central lines are more a matter of pride and/or actually getting to do an independent procedure as a new surgical trainee. Head lacs, arterial lines, central lines, chest tubes represent those procedures that start to make you feel like a surgeon when you start residency. But, there is no real set "correct number" that you should attain during your internship. What you need to attain is proficiency and confidence in performing these with good surgical technique & principles. The number it takes to achieve this goal is resident dependent (i.e. changes depending on the individual's aptitude).how many central lines should I have half way through my intern year in surgery?
YesA question out of curiosity - are medical students in the States allowed to place central lines, arterial lines, suture in the OR, perform small procedures (under supervision of course)?...
Although I agree with the above statement, let me just give you my two cents.
The intern experience varies at different institutions. I am at an academic institution where the intern's job is to master the pre- and post-operative care of the surgical patient. We rarely see the inside of the OR at least as the first assistant and also rarely get to do procedures. I understand that residents in community programs do much more operative stuff.
Anyway no matter where you are, I think that if you are observed doing 5-10 central lines at any site you are on your way. Central line placement experience mostly comes during the second year which in most programs is devoted to critical care. During that time you should try to do at least 10 femoral lines (easy), 10 IJ's (w/ ultrasound as it is the standard of care), and 10+ subclavian lines. Obviously subclavians are the toughest to master. Just my two cents.
Still, even in programs that are anemic for bedside procedures, the intern should be doing more lines than in the above quote. Central lines are not really "operative stuff" and usually go hand in hand with learning pre and post-op care.
I think it depends more on each institution. At my medical school, there was a "central line service" that consisted of a surgical PGY-2 who put in every central line for floor patients. At my current institution, VIR performs the same service. As a result, the junior surgical resident only puts in supervised central lines when on their one-month intern ICU rotation or one of their 10 weeks in the ICU as a PGY-2. As many patients arrive with central lines in place and as each call team consists of 2-3 residents, it is reasonable that an intern would only do 5-10 lines during the intern year.
Probably not... since the medicine RRC has removed central line placement as a required procedure during training and IM PD are now handing them over to surgery and PICC nurses... I suspect the medicine complication rate can be expected to rise....Also, if you're really only doing 20-30 lines a year, and you get a single pneumothorax during your junior residency, you are matching up right next to the medicine residents in complication rates......
Forgive my ignorance but in what context do people do more than 30 CVLs a year? I average just over 25 a year, having been on trauma and SICU rotations multiple times now.
Is it that some programs get severe traumas that require massive resuscitation so often that they end up putting in a bunch? More ICU patients that require CVLs? Do they put them in for elective OR cases? In my program, placing a CVL is not a senior level procedure, but we just don't have the need to place hundreds of lines per year. We do have a PICC team, but don't order PICCs that frequently.
how many central lines should I have half way through my intern year in surgery?
how many central lines should I have half way through my intern year in surgery?
I think you describe a real trend in some areas. There are programs that routinely put central lines even if just for blood draws. There are also high census programs that pride themselves on minimalist approaches including very limited usage of central line placement. So, it is possible to find your program with limited number of central lines and those that exist placed intra-op by anesthesia and a grumbling surgery attending.... If your program is stingy on CVL indication & placement, use that opportunity to learn about indications for placement, etc... You need to be aware of indications, risks, and benefits and you need to know your skill level. If you recognize a deficiency, seek out improvement. Some need 100 lines, others feel fairly comfortable in 1/4 that number.... Bottom line do the best with whatever opportunities you get.Forgive my ignorance but in what context do people do more than 30 CVLs a year? ...
Is it that some programs get severe traumas that require massive resuscitation so often that they end up putting in a bunch? More ICU patients that require CVLs? ...In my program, placing a CVL is not a senior level procedure, but we just don't have the need to place hundreds of lines per year...
Forgive my ignorance but in what context do people do more than 30 CVLs a year? I average just over 25 a year, having been on trauma and SICU rotations multiple times now.
Ahhh, but those lines are very often owned by anesthesia and anesthesia residents. Also, true cardiac exposure is less and less these days. I don't even know if there is a cardiac requirement anymore... or if cardiac cases are required.Before major elective cases. Every heart case is a chance to do a central line...
Generally agree. You aren't a master after 10 at a given site, but you have reasonable familiarity and foundation to then face the challenge of not so simple cases.......the number is different for everybody but I think its probably around 10 or so at each site (maybe less for femorals) before its real comfortable and then the hard ones become challenging rather than scary.
Ahhh, but those lines are very often owned by anesthesia and anesthesia residents.
I can not stand the arrow kits for radial arterial or even femoral arterial lines. For radials, I ALWAYS use a green IV catheter with a single stich and they last until the patient is ready to leave the unit and it is removed....For art lines... It survives the night about half the time....unless of course, they used an IV instead of an actual arrow kit, then it might not even survive the case...
I can not stand the arrow kits for radial arterial or even femoral arterial lines. For radials, I ALWAYS use a green IV catheter with a single stich and they last until the patient is ready to leave the unit and it is removed.
I can't help but wonder if the posters insisting that 100 lines per year is barely enough trained in the past and those saying to expect 10 are in training now.
.........At this point in my intern year I've placed 2 central lines, pulled about 50, mostly anesthesia's IJs.
I absolutely hate most lines started by anesthesia. I really like the anesthesia residents and staff, but their mindset is just different since all they have to do is get the patient through the case. If their line fails at 2am after surgery, it's not really their problem.
For CVLs, they never do it sterile enough, they always place a big 8.5 french Cordis, which isn't necessary, they always do an IJ, rarely use ultrasound, usually put one stitch in it, and then thread the 30cm 2-lumen line (with swandom) through. The next day, if the line survived the night, it is flapping around in the wind without any protection, with lots of patient slobber all over it, and the 2-lumen is almost surely pulled out far enough where the tip is inside the cordis.
For art lines (where they feel they're superior to us), I am lucky if they even put on sterile gloves, they rarely do any draping, then hopefully rub some alcohol on the skin, and place it after about 5 attempts. Once it's in, they almost never put in even a single stitch, instead just dabbing some betadine ointment on there (you know, so it doesn't get infected), and then put fifty pieces of tape on it. It survives the night about half the time....unless of course, they used an IV instead of an actual arrow kit, then it might not even survive the case.
I can not stand the arrow kits for radial arterial or even femoral arterial lines. For radials, I ALWAYS use a green IV catheter with a single stich and they last until the patient is ready to leave the unit and it is removed.
I can't help but wonder if the posters insisting that 100 lines per year is barely enough trained in the past and those saying to expect 10 are in training now.
Everywhere I've been (not too many places) lines are hard to come by. When a patient needs TPN they go for a PICC. When they need a port for chemo or HD a radiologist places the line. If they have a big elective procedure like a whipple or some vascular procedure anesthesia places it. IM residents will try to do their own lines instead of calling surgery.
To add to the grievances against the anesthesiologist lines: they always cinch their knots down too tight so when the surgical intern pulls the line the next day he/she has to pull and tug and dig out a bare stretch of suture to cut. At this point in my intern year I've placed 2 central lines, pulled about 50, mostly anesthesia's IJs.
Without going into point by point rebuttals, I can assure you that the practice described is widely divergent from how I was trained and practice. I'll be happy to describe what I do if anyone cares.
Has anyone tried to modify the practices you are concerned about? I don't mean as the line is going in, but maybe this practice area could be improved by a multi-specialty solution. After all, it isn't that hard to add another stitch around the hub.
As an aside, I stopped using the Arrows 2 years ago. I follow up on my patients as best as I can, and they tend to keep their a-lines a long time with the Angiocaths. Without having evidence either way, I think nursing practice is the determinant of an a-line's longevity.
I have to admit, never saw the Cochrane review on that.I thought there was a Cochrane review a few years back which found in favor of subclavians for reduced infection, thrombosis, line related complications, etc and that the degree of *clinically significant* stenosis was low, not high enough to avoid using them.
CochraneSummary said:...No studies compared the neck access site with other sites so no conclusions can be drawn about the relative advantages or disadvantages of access in the neck...
Author's conclusions:
....Subclavian CVA is preferable to femoral CVA. Further trials of subclavian versus femoral or jugular CVA are needed...
I have to admit, never saw the Cochrane review on that.
However, other then emergencies.... elective IJ under direct guidance (i.e. u/s) is listed as something like.... ~one of the top ten things for better hospital outcomes.... per leapfrog. While leap frog does not equate standard of care.... it is getting pretty close. IMHO, it makes it increasingly hard to argue/defend a bad subclavian outcome in a non-emergent situation.
Don't get me wrong... I prefer and always have preferred subclavians. But, I do find anatomy driving of an IJ confirmed with u/s a little more stimulating. Subclavians just seem too easy to me.... a clavicle is a clavicle.
Maybe it's cause PTHx just don't raise any level of excitement in me anymoreI dunno I like the "danger" of a possible PTX to drive me! 😉...
All good points brought up. As for infection, I have never had a central line that I've placed get infected. Ever.
I think it's a shame that some of my co-residents are not comfortable doing an IJ with landmarks a not ultrasound. It's a skill I consider mandatory for anesthesiologists to be able to do.
Generally got to agree with that with the caveat being... in non-emergent situations....being able to do IJs without ultrasound is an essential skill, but doing an IJ without ultrasound when ultrasound is available is negligent. Ultrasound guidance is the standard of care, and there was a recent (?2-3 yrs ago) ACS consensus statement on it...
If you have any links and/or references to this application of u/s, it would be much appreciated. I too have not performed subclavs under u/s....What's going to be even harder for us to accept is Sono-guided subclavians, which is currently a skill I don't possess...
I think this one will be a harder one to prove.... You need to demonstrate some sort of significant complication rate followed by proof that u/s has a reasonable impact on decreasing said complication rate......sono-guided art lines will soon be the standard of care as well...
Sort of... But, you should have a peer review and complications review... The current problem that promotes continued deficiencies between specialties is lack of communication of complications. Cards & IR are too often seperated from their groin complications. It is the same for anesthesia. they are too often seperated from their line complications. Instead of simply placing an extra suture in the line, you should communicate that the line was innadequately secured... These matters should come up at M&M or peer review. In worst case scenario, I have seen no additional stitch placed, line lost.... caught the attention of anesthesia and generated new protocols and requirements. It doesn't need to be a urination contests. I like anesthesia, they are usually fun to hang out with and they are usually very interested in literature and data for best patient care outcomes.... communicate with them....bringing up such perceived deficiencies to anesthesia is a big middle finger/slap in the face, and I don't think it's worth straining the relationship...
Then you haven't placed enough central lines. It's not like all infections are the result of poor technique.
Not proven ..... can the numbers be decreased? Yes. But, "entirely preventable" is hyperbole....we have data that indicates that VAP is also entirely preventable...
Not proven ..... can the numbers be decreased? Yes. But, "entirely preventable" is hyperbole.
A single institutions success over some set period of time does not equate.... "enitirely preventable"It hasn't been published yet...
Sorry but I'm going to disagree. I'm not going to say that line infection = poor technique because it does happen. They should be vanishingly rare, no matter what the acuity is. I'll see if I can share our hospital epidemiology data. Meanwhile, take a look at the NEJM Michigan Hospital Association Keystone article (Pronovost Dec 28 2006). Rates decreased from 2.7 (0.6-4.8) per 1000 catheter-days to 0 (0-2.4) per 1000 catheter-days 18 months after implementation. BTW we have data that indicates that VAP is also entirely preventable.
What is your hospital's data?
Have been lucky so far, but have been called on to place chest tubes when someone else has. With vented patients I have seen that despite a long time between the placement and the chest tube going in (because sometimes people are waiting for a read on a film instead of looking at it themselves), I haven't noticed any associated signs from the pneumo.
Considering how small the hole is likely to be and given the fact that we observe a lot of small traumatic pneumo's (even the occasional vented patient)with most going on to resolve without a tube I wonder if we are being too quick to treat.
I agree somewhat. Treatment of iatrogenic PTXs needs to be individualized. If the patient has a small PTX and is asymptomatic, they can probably tolerate a trial of conservative therapy. However, if the PTX is large or the patient is symptomatic, or the patient is on positive pressure ventilation, some sort of drainage procedure is in order.
Also, I don't think we need to jump immediately to large-bore chest tubes. We can use pneumocaths, etc instead and cause less pain/morbidity in our patients. Of course, this depends on the situation, and some patients absolutely need a big tube in place. Others simply need the PTX to be drained with an angiocath or pigtail, then the catheter can be removed.
As for which patients to be especially careful with, I've found that the really skinny females, which were both middle aged or older with big smoking histories in my experience, are somewhat easier to screw up....on a subclavian, there's just less room between the clavicle and the ribcage in these patients.
I agree somewhat. ...the old saying, which will probably irk Proman, is that if you haven't dropped a lung, then you haven't done enough lines. The published PTX rate with surgical residents and staff is 1%, and can be as high as 5-10% in the medical literature.
Suspend your disbelief but I actually completely agree. It's a primary reason why we like IJs (although I've seen a medicine resident cause a PTX via the neck) compared to subclavian. Who's dropped a lung after an IJ? I haven't after about 250 (have done much fewer subclavians, mostly in the units).