Critical Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ultrasound Guided Vascular Access: A Prospective Comparison Study
The purpose of this study is to see how fast and accurate two different techniques used by physicians to insert catheters in children are. Catheters are tiny tubes which carry fluids, blood and sometimes liquid food into a person's vein. The technique currently used relies on the physical landmarks and using fingers to feel the anatomy in which to place the catheter in the vein or artery. The investigators are changing to a technique where they will use ultrasound at the patient's bedside to help physicians with placing the catheter into the blood vessel. They are comparing the use of these two methods to determine which is faster and requires fewer needle sticks.
In critically ill patients, central venous access is essential for volume resuscitation,
administration of medicines (such as vasoactive drugs, antibiotics or chemotherapy),
administration of blood products, and hemodynamic monitoring. Placement of central venous
lines occurs commonly with over 200,000 CVCs placed in adults and children yearly. At
Egleston 222 central venous lines were placed last year and 178 CVCs YTD through October.
Obtaining central venous access in critically ill children can be a difficult procedure with
many potential complications. These complications can include, but are not limited to,
hematoma at the site, hemothorax, pneumothorax, need to change sites, and injury to
surrounding structures. The complication rates for CVCs in children is reported anywhere
from 2.5% to 22%. All too frequently CVC placement in children is unsuccessful anywhere from
5% of the time to greater than 19%.
Studies in adults have shown ultrasound guided central venous access to decrease the number
of attempts required to cannulate the vein. US guidance is also able to decrease the time
required to cannulate the vessel. A meta analysis of ultrasound guided central venous access
in adults concluded that for internal jugular procedures ultrasound guidance was
significantly more successful than the landmark technique alone. With the recent focus on
patient safety and clinical outcomes the American College of Emergency Physicians published
a policy statement included in the guidelines use of US guidance for central venous access
in a list of primary applications for ultrasound in the emergency department.
Evidence for US guidance in children is currently found mainly in the anesthesia literature.
The 2003 NICE sponsored meta-analysis showed an overall relative risk reduction of 85% for
failed placement and 73% for complications of internal jugular placement in pediatric
patients in an operating room. Because of small sample sizes (each < 100 patients) and only
the internal jugular approach being studied, definitive conclusions regarding other sites
are ongoing. Currently there are no prospective studies evaluating the use of ultrasound
guided central venous access in children in a pediatric intensive care unit. Also, studies
addressing the use of US guided CVC placement in femoral access, the major site used in
children, is also lacking.
Our proposal is to prove that US guided CVC will decrease the overall time required to
cannulate the vessel by increasing the probability of successful cannulation by the first
operator, decreasing the number of skin punctures to obtain access, eliminating the need to
change sites for access, and improving the probability of access. Additionally we believe
that US guided CVC placement would decrease the likelihood of untoward effects including but
not limited to severe hematoma requiring attempts at additional sites, inadvertent puncture
of the wrong vessel, or hemothorax/pneumothorax.
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