| Literature DB >> 28913733 |
Christopher Raio1, Robert Elspermann1, Natwalee Kittisarapong1, Brendon Stankard1, Tanya Bajaj1, Veena Modayil1, Mathew Nelson1, Gerardo Chiricolo2, Benjamin Wie1, Alexandra Snock1, Michael Mackay1, Adam Ash3.
Abstract
The primary study objective was to evaluate insertion success rates. Secondary objectives included patient satisfaction, procedure time, complication rates, completion of therapy and dwell time of the novel AccuCath® 2.25″ Blood Control (BC) Catheter System (FDA approved) placed in difficult-access patients. This was a single-arm feasibility trial evaluating the AccuCath® 2.25″ BC Catheter System in a convenience sample of DIVA patients defined as at least two failed initial attempts or a history of difficult access plus the inability to directly visualize or palpate a target vein. All enrolled patients were 18 years of age or older. A total of 120 patients were enrolled. These patients had an average of 3.7 and median of 3 prior attempts at vascular access prior to AccuCath placement. Successful access was gained in 100% of the patients, 77% on the first attempt and all within three attempts; 88.5% of patients completed therapy, with the remaining 12.5% experiencing minor complications that required discontinuation of the catheter. The average patient satisfaction score on a 5-point Likert scale was highly positive at 4.6. Preliminary results show that the AccuCath® 2.25″ BC Catheter System has excellent success rates in gaining vascular access in an extremely difficult patient population. The device did not lead to any significant complications. Patients were also very satisfied with the procedure.Entities:
Keywords: Difficult vascular access; Peripheral intravenous access; Ultrasound-guided intravenous access
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28913733 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-017-1747-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 3.397