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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 6/2007

01-06-2007 | Brief Report

Mechanical complications and malpositions of central venous cannulations by experienced operators

A prospective study of 1794 catheterizations in critically ill patients

Authors: Wolfram Schummer, Claudia Schummer, Norman Rose, Wolf-Dirk Niesen, Samir G. Sakka

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 6/2007

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Abstract

Objective

Incidence of primary mechanical complications and malpositions associated with landmark-guided central venous access procedures (CVAP) performed by experienced operators.

Design

Prospective 5-year observational study on two intensive care units.

Intervention

Only CVAPs using Seldinger technique were evaluated. Age, gender, puncture site, number of cannulation attempts, and complications within 24 hours and malpositions were recorded.

Patients

782 CVAPs in females aged 9–92 yrs and 1012 CVAPs in males aged 6–89 yrs.

Results

We analyzed 1794 (1017 right- and 777 left-sided CVAP), of which 87.7% were accomplished without adverse events. More than one cannulation attempt was a risk factor for failed catheterization, other mechanical complications but not for malposition. Complications/malpositions were encountered in 220 CVAPs.In 51 CVAPs (2.8%) the cannulation failed at the attempted site, here 18 CVAPs were accompanied by further complications (35.3%). Otherwise, the rate for mechanical complications was low (3.3%). The most common mechanical complications (n = 127) were arterial punctures (n = 52; 2.9%), including four arterial cannulations (0.2%), and pneumothorax (n = 9; 0.6%). There was significant risk for arterial puncture with the internal jugular vein approach in comparison to the innominate vein (p = 0.004), but not to the subclavian vein (p = 0.065). Male patients had a lower risk for failure (2.1%) than females (3.8%, p = 0.028). One-hundred-twenty-one central venous catheters were malpositioned (6.7%) of which 35 were related to the left internal jugular vein.

Conclusions

Even experienced operators cause a considerable number of early mechanical complications and malpositions. After two unsuccessful cannulation attempts failure and associated complications are very likely.
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Metadata
Title
Mechanical complications and malpositions of central venous cannulations by experienced operators
A prospective study of 1794 catheterizations in critically ill patients
Authors
Wolfram Schummer
Claudia Schummer
Norman Rose
Wolf-Dirk Niesen
Samir G. Sakka
Publication date
01-06-2007
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 6/2007
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-007-0560-z

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