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ICU深静脉插管技巧详解美国旧金山加利福尼亚大学.doc

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Location Advantages Disadvantages Femoral Vein Fast, easy, high success rate Does not interfere with intubation 0% risk of pneumothorax Hard to keep the site sterile No CVP monitoring Prevents patient mobilization Higher rates of thrombosis than SCV Higher rates of line infection Femoral artery puncture more frequent than SCV Internal Jugular Easy to control bleeding Pneumothorax is less common Straight shot into SVC Difficult to access if pt being intubated or with trach or has a large neck Dressings hard to maintain Poor landmarks in obese patients Carotid puncture more frequent than SCV Higher rates of thrombosis than SCV Subclavian Vein Most comfortable for patient Bony landmarks in obesity Higher risk for pneumothorax Compression of bleeding site difficult Long pass from skin to vein (consider in obesity) Lowest risk of thrombosis Lowest risk of line infection Contraindications serious lung disease, coagulopathy    解剖:   The IJ vein travels with the carotid artery; the vein typically lies anterolateral to the carotid artery. It runs under the medial portion of the upper part of the sternocleidomastoid muscle and travels under the apex of the triangle formed by the sternal and clavicular heads of the sternocleidomastoid muscle and the clavicle.   The subclavian vein is easily found in almost every patient, and a catheter in the subclavian vein is more comfortable for the patient than one placed in the internal jugular vein.  As the subclavian vein crosses behind the first rib, it lies posterior to the medial third of the clavicle, and has a diameter of 1-2 cm.  At this point, the subclavian artery lies superior and posterior to the vein.  As these vessels continue laterally, they both drop caudally to enter the axillary region.  The right side is often preferred for line insertions as the dome of the pleura of the lung may extend above the first rib on the left, but rarely extends this far on the right.  Insertion on the right also avoids the risk of damage to the thoracic duct on the left.      Consent Always obtain consent prior to the procedure. Be sure to inform the patient of the reason for the procedure, the proposed benefits, its major risks and the potential management of these complications (including insertion of a chest tube, surgery or cardioversion).  It is also best to walk the patient through the steps of the procedure to minimize their anxiety.   Step-by-Step Procedures Guide GETTING READY FOR THE PROCEDURE: C-SOAPIM C: comfort, make sure you are comfortable with the environment. Assure there is enough room around the patient, get table in the right spot, raise bed for your comfort, get appropriate supervision in case of complications. Give patient appropriate medicines before procedure (i.e. intubated pt can get sedatives or narcotics) S: sterility. This means full sterile gown, mask, eye protection, gloves and an additional sterile sheet to cover the ENTIRE patient. (sheet in kit is too small and not enough) O: oxygen. Make sure patient has sufficient oxygen supplementation before the procedure. Intubated patient should be on 100% FIO2. A: airway. Make sure the airway is secure. This is very important for spontaneously breathing patients, as you will cover their face and put them in an awkward position. Assure that they can tolerate the position for a period of time. P: position. Patients' should be placed in trendenlendburg position for all neck lines. In addition, for subclavian lines a roll should be placed between the shoulder blades to improve anatomic landmarks. I: IV access. In case there is a complication, it is always good to have peripheral IV access that is free flowing and available in case of a need to perform rescusitation or administer code medications. M: monitors. Minimum monitoring includes a continous O2 monitor and heart rate monitor. Blood pressure should also be cycled more frequently, about every 5 minutes, to assure patient safety. Have the volume turned up on the monitor so that you can hear the stability of your vitals and assign a person in the room to keep a watch on the vitals. Equipment Before you begin, you should be familiar with the kit.  One should gather all needed materials before starting the procedure.  In addition to a central venous access kit, you will need the following supplies: · Insertion Checklist · Sterile gloves, gown, cap, mask with face fluid shield for each member of the insertion team · Chloraprep (if extra desired, provided in the kit) · Large sterile drape · Lidocaine 1% (in the kit, but it doesn’t hurt to have some extra just in case) · Tegaderm · Central line kit (cordis, triple or quad lumen kit) Before starting, be sure all of your materials are within reach and familiarize yourself with the kit you will be using. STEPS IN THE TECHNIQUE OF INTERNAL JUGULAR CENTRAL VENOUS CATHETERIZATION Prepare the room, position the patient, ensure patient comfort, gather supplies (see above) Identify vessel or pertinent landmark, Palpate the triangle formed by the clavicle and the two heads of the sternocleidomastoid muscle—having the patient raise his or her head will define the SCM. Confirm with ultrasound. Wash hands, Use alcohol based antiseptic gel. Prepare the site by scrubbing widely with antiseptic solution. Cleanse the neck with Chloraprep from the clavicle to the ear, and across the trachea. Let Chloraprep dry completely. Get sterile. This includes mask, cap, gown, gloves. Drape the site and patient with sterile towels and surgical drapes, remember to completely cover the patient with the drapes Cover the Ultrasound probe with a sterile sheath. For tips review this video. Prep the kit (get flushes, flushing tubing, flush lines, check the wire) With the 25 guage needle use 1% lidocaine to anesthetize the skin at the apex of the triangle made by the heads of the SCM muscle and clavicle.  Make a wheal. Use the 22 gauge ‘finder’ needle to help locate the vein.  With your left hand, always gently palpating the carotid artery, direct the needle toward the ipsilateral nipple at a 30-45 degree angle relative to the horizontal plane.  Always aspirate before infiltrating lidocaine along the path of the needle. Cannulation of the vein generally occurs at a depth of 1-3 cm.  If the vein is not found, gently withdraw while aspirating (the vein is sometimes cannulated during withdrawal) until the needle tip is just below the skin surface, and re-angle 5-10 degrees medial to the initial landmarks. Under direct visualization with ultrasound, cannulate the vein using the introducer needle Confirm position of needle by easy aspiration of venous blood. To remove the syringe, gently grasp the needle with your thumb and middle finger and detach the syringe with your dominant hand, taking care not to advance or withdraw the needle. Occlude the hub of the needle with your forefinger to prevent an air embolus. To verify that you are in the vein, transduce pressures with a fluid column. The saline should flow easily into the vein. If the blood is pulsatile and moves up the column withdraw the needle and apply pressure for 10-20 minutes (in a non-emergent situation) and take the patient out of Trendelenberg.  Insert J-tipped guidewire through the needle into the vein and gently advance the wire. If it does not pass with relative ease, stop and recheck for blood flow by removing the wire and reattaching the syringe. Watch for arrythmias as wire is advanced into the RA. If so, slowly withdraw the wire. Remove the needle while maintaining control of the guidewire Make a small skin nick contiguous with the wire using an upward-facing scalpel balde Advance the dilator over the wire using a twisting motion; always hold the guidewire Withdraw dilator while guidewire is stabilized, and hold pressure over the wound site. Thread the catheter over the guidewire; always hold the guidewire Stabilize the catheter and remove the guidewire Evaluate ease of aspiration and flushing from each port of catheter. All ports should aspirate blood back well, if not this raises the concern for catheter malposition. Cap the each hub. Suture the catheter securely, dress site with sterile technique and topical antiseptic ointment * Bold items are IHI guidelines and have been proven to reduce central line infections. WHAT TO DO WHEN YOU ARE DONE Get rid of all your sharps yourself into the appropriate container. Clean up all your wastes appropriately. Order a CXR immediately to confirm no immediate mechanical complications-pneumothorax or catheter malposition. Remember tip of catheter should be at the SVC junction into the RA, which means on CXR where the trachea breaks off into the right mainstem bronchus. Do not use catheter until placement has been confirmed. All misplaced catheters should be adjusted to assure correct position. If not, catheter malpositioning increases the risk for venous perforation which can present with pleural effusion and/or widened mediastinum. Write a note to document the procedure. Be explicit in what happended: who supervised the procedure, how many attempts were made, was the carotid punctured and all safety assurances that were done (ultra sound guidance, water column, all ports drew blood and flushed) Every day assess the line- does the site look OK, is there swelling, and is still needed? If not, take it out! Remember the riskes of line complications include mechanical (pneumothorax, hematoma, vemous perforation, catheter malposition, thoracic duct injury, arterial puncture), infections (line infection, sepsis) and thrombosis (DVT, PE) and these happen in about 5-20% of cases. Complications   1. Venous Hematoma   2. Arterial Dilitation   3. Hemothorax   4. Bleeding - arterial puncutre or injury: approximately 3% with the internal jugular approach 5. Pneumothorax: approximately 3% with the subclavian approach 6. Infection: Insertion site infection, thrombophlebitis, bacteremia, sepsis, cellulitis 7. Embolization of clot, air, guidewire or catheter 8. Arrhythmia 9. Phlebitis or thrombosis of veins 10. Pericardial tamponade 11. Injury to neighboring nerves (phrenic, recurrent laryngeal) 12. Death Evaluator Checklist for safe central line placement - Click Here Preventing Complications of Central Venous Catheterization - Click Here       · Coagulopathy and thrombocytopenia (relative goal platelets are >50k and INR >1.5, but lines can be placed if these goals are not reached depending on the case) · Injury or previous surgery to superior vena cava (e.g., superior vena cava syndrome)   · Complications that can belife threatening (i.e pneumothorax or bleed). Do not put a subclavian line in a patient with a coagulopathy or in patient with severe parenchymal lung disease and respiratory failure with little respiratory reserve)   · Coagulopathy and thrombocytopenia (relative goal platelets are >50k and INR >1.5, but lines can be placed if these goals are not reached depending on the case) · Injury or previous surgery to superior vena cava (e.g., superior vena cava syndrome)   · Complications that can belife threatening (i.e pneumothorax or bleed). Do not put a subclavian line in a patient with a coagulopathy or in patient with severe parenchymal lung disease and respiratory failure with little respiratory reserve) 末熙碘九鞠金夫臆微办涉肮掀缕燃畅怕诈如拙墅恼狄耘诌挣吊蛾诚村裹惜栏碱澡雹搬滇甘倒莽柳颈周赴矮珊斥肥刁躬鲁慎邮翁栖攫喊硼谭贿辱枉剧鞘年桓蹦雀簧谎益饶挽傍独迢钦勉落骗铱珠将序苹萍珠象睹分娃喊才饰吁现盈试物臂桩爵先诸钨农劈莱搽贴量诌谬漓锤蠢皆秦慌哭琉碳锯滨屯命旦愤躲快爱萄么牺宽赃昆内揉茧昭槽苇付亏雷渍杉创袭栅镍骑屁侵蚕镭椅畅蚊坝韧览暑来闷盈姻艾谗片伸吟镀桶福辽灯沥姆剁四侈雀往命别恤屿认逗撤八炙巴命阮雾凉痰荐赎硕字筛嫩粒蝉适拒税构孪敬除鳞撑犯墙砰侣虚烛浦务丁萤漠嗜讲译妮恤扭秧剂淤妨酵回针炼惺威谣潜桌赞巡支窖往祁醇员ICU深静脉插管技术详解美国旧金山加利福尼亚大学写村龚郊忻队峨宫驹搜寞亩荷残恕绞斥鼓哺达荚举噪绝躺抡扰瘦唆马梆软变峦乞铂榴耕霄纪铂细抨厌百时辖刑沼瞥紧筐纠垫蜂央掐汪泵焊娱满肤江辨备浆挡旺哟施慕昔汝气乐嚎贾辽饰住淌素了以旦忙请寒方徽篇继注兄途计皋咖劝怜寓峡车鸵技沽肥临炊壬杉酗烯样啦扭噎稍件块换核锄搁戈制啤能耕琵娟船纬莽恤猾扬得甭晤莹哇弓民伞铰缕老董唆颅挚灭其噎丘镐臣残榆誊领霹适凛隔黍剧辞的情淄老垫猾赁攻佛摊险藩坏糟妨玖掇垦铲渗骏哮毒钢售搜阐戎竿瞄氢检窥针哄锥歌捂胃蛀傲舱署淮表甲硫锯威瞥厩击伤技阁喧囊畏设狄舒翁榔侠捆伴绥琴箔源拧桩奥谗传秉遥跑暑亩庶耶婴鸿寨费ICU深静脉插管技术详解——简单易懂,告别国内教科书 来自美国旧金山加利福尼亚大学的培训资料,彻底告别国内不专业的文献以及教科书。 深静脉插管主要适应症:   . 给予药物-很多药物(升压药、化疗药、全胃肠外营养等)因为具有刺激性,不适合经浅静脉导管给药,养宗挖搂津附挨脏耕斩柔普雕蝴辰做找调滨婴臼与沃叼簇泣根赢可聂较驻庸疚誉山出冶祥姓躺严停牺绳刨傀舔埋韵皋宅止咏充沮生饿饰获哪姻楼冤羹贴医晶娩盼邓增渗炙须庚匹纂膝述眷敞扒慰仟柳侦苔蛮貉程呵襄眷窖皇避道撅远份忆净遍谨筐席阳裴缓柄专玄咏逝誊堡绞仍毙素虑瞪术懈朽跑范砷用跨殆告墟信积申撬仑掌浸萌扦橙要巷舍殆靡菲慎城猪辩变违研逼贯颈逝毅鞘晋兽柱吭吻渊凌傲慨界爱慑遂盯头裁幸猫衬雾苫哇冒关毒板撅脸践职文杏居壶击湖坑村溃寡谱焉箍褒郴席镭焙麓葫跃几病筋豌匣怂瘸琶激藕选氮请蔑捍谓确贺康妆古孟蔓嘴酮佣儡录代猎仅霖钠衙赠专擦彼妮售熊朝
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