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I can usually blind stick a 20G in between the middle and ring finger between the proximal phalanxes with good consistency and accuracy, even in dehydrated patients. Cephalic vein near the medial wrist is good too. Try applying a warm/damp cloth for 5 minutes to help distend them.
I can usually blind stick a 20G in between the middle and ring finger between the proximal phalanxes with good consistency and accuracy, even in dehydrated patients. Cephalic vein near the medial wrist is good too. Try applying a warm/damp cloth for 5 minutes to help distend them.
The cephalic vein runs lateral, not medial. And yes, it is a fairly easy stick.
The main thing is getting good at feeling veins, which have a spongier feel than the surrounding tissue. This is hard to feel through gloves, so if you see a patient with no obvious veins, try feeling for a vein before putting your gloves on.
This. The nurses pretty much always place IVs here, but I use an U/S for art lines all the time when a patient is hypotensive and edematous.Ultrasound. Why you wouldn't use it, if it is available, on a hard stick is beyond my imagination.
Yep. Just go anterior to the medial malleolus for the GSV:When in doubt, look at the feet.