Michael J Vitto1, Melissa Myers2, Christina M Vitto2, David P Evans2. 1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia USA. michael.vitto@vcuhealth.org. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To our knowledge, no previous studies have evaluated the perceived levels of difficulty between traditional and ultrasound (US)-guided peripheral intravenous (IV) access in the novice provider. We attempt to show that, in a group of medical students who have limited peripheral IV experience, US-guided peripheral IV cannulation can be achieved more effectively and with a lesser degree of difficulty than standard peripheral IV cannulation. METHODS: We performed a randomized crossover study of 61 first- and second-year medical students. After a 1-hour training session, participants were randomized to either standard cannulation on a standard peripheral IV trainer or US-guided cannulation on a standard US IV trainer. RESULTS: One hundred percent (61 of 61) of the participants in the US-guided IV group successfully achieved cannulation versus 56% (34 of 61) of the participants in the standard IV group (P < .001). The average number of attempts to obtain access in the US-guided IV group was 1.31 versus 2.16 in the standard IV group (P < .001). The average difficulty score assigned to US-guided cannulation was 2.81 of 10 versus 3.90 of 10 in the standard IV group (P = .003). CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows a decrease in perceived difficulty and a concomitant increased ability to cannulate a vein using US versus traditional landmark guidance techniques, even in the novice phlebotomist.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVES: To our knowledge, no previous studies have evaluated the perceived levels of difficulty between traditional and ultrasound (US)-guided peripheral intravenous (IV) access in the novice provider. We attempt to show that, in a group of medical students who have limited peripheral IV experience, US-guided peripheral IV cannulation can be achieved more effectively and with a lesser degree of difficulty than standard peripheral IV cannulation. METHODS: We performed a randomized crossover study of 61 first- and second-year medical students. After a 1-hour training session, participants were randomized to either standard cannulation on a standard peripheral IV trainer or US-guided cannulation on a standard US IV trainer. RESULTS: One hundred percent (61 of 61) of the participants in the US-guided IV group successfully achieved cannulation versus 56% (34 of 61) of the participants in the standard IV group (P < .001). The average number of attempts to obtain access in the US-guided IV group was 1.31 versus 2.16 in the standard IV group (P < .001). The average difficulty score assigned to US-guided cannulation was 2.81 of 10 versus 3.90 of 10 in the standard IV group (P = .003). CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows a decrease in perceived difficulty and a concomitant increased ability to cannulate a vein using US versus traditional landmark guidance techniques, even in the novice phlebotomist.
Authors: Robert James Adrian; April Choi; Sangeeta Lamba; Ilya Ostrovsky; Christine Ramdin; Christin Traba; Sophia Chen; Alexander Sudyn; Stephen Alerhand Journal: MedEdPORTAL Date: 2022-02-02
Authors: Richard A Hoppmann; Jeanette Mladenovic; Lawrence Melniker; Radu Badea; Michael Blaivas; Miguel Montorfano; Alfred Abuhamad; Vicki Noble; Arif Hussain; Gregor Prosen; Tomás Villen; Gabriele Via; Ramon Nogue; Craig Goodmurphy; Marcus Bastos; G Stephen Nace; Giovanni Volpicelli; Richard J Wakefield; Steve Wilson; Anjali Bhagra; Jongyeol Kim; David Bahner; Chris Fox; Ruth Riley; Peter Steinmetz; Bret P Nelson; John Pellerito; Levon N Nazarian; L Britt Wilson; Irene W Y Ma; David Amponsah; Keith R Barron; Renee K Dversdal; Mike Wagner; Anthony J Dean; David Tierney; James W Tsung; Paula Nocera; José Pazeli; Rachel Liu; Susanna Price; Luca Neri; Barbara Piccirillo; Adi Osman; Vaughan Lee; Nitha Naqvi; Tomislav Petrovic; Paul Bornemann; Maxime Valois; Jean-Francoise Lanctot; Robert Haddad; Deepak Govil; Laura A Hurtado; Vi Am Dinh; Robert M DePhilip; Beatrice Hoffmann; Resa E Lewiss; Nayana A Parange; Akira Nishisaki; Stephanie J Doniger; Paul Dallas; Kevin Bergman; J Oscar Barahona; Ximena Wortsman; R Stephen Smith; Craig A Sisson; James Palma; Mike Mallin; Liju Ahmed; Hassan Mustafa Journal: Ultrasound J Date: 2022-07-27
Authors: Rasmus Jørgensen; Christian B Laursen; Lars Konge; Pia Iben Pietersen Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med Date: 2021-06-27 Impact factor: 2.953
Authors: Nanna L Andersen; Rune O Jensen; Stefan Posth; Christian B Laursen; Rasmus Jørgensen; Ole Graumann Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) Date: 2021-07-09 Impact factor: 1.889