| Literature DB >> 21455906 |
Howard T Harcke, Geoffrey Crawley, Brandi A Ritter, Edward L Mazuchowski.
Abstract
Intraosseous vascular infusion (IO) is a recognized alternative to peripheral intravenous infusion when access is inadequate. The sternum and proximal tibia are the preferred sites. A review of 98 cases at autopsy revealed successful sternal IO placement in 78 cases (80%). Assuming a worst case scenario for placement (pin mark and no tip in bone [17 cases] and tip present and not in the sternum [3 cases]), attempts were unsuccessful in 20 cases (20%). We draw no specific conclusions regarding sternal IO use, but hope that personnel placing these devices and those providing medical training can use the information. 2011.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21455906 DOI: 10.55460/JFQH-D0AH
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Spec Oper Med ISSN: 1553-9768