View clinical trials related to Phlebitis.
Filter by:The goal of this randomised controlled trial is to determine the effectiveness of topical sesame oil in preventing phlebitis at peripheral intravenous (IV) cannula sites in adult patients within a cardiovascular and cardiothoracic department of a tertiary hospital. The main question it aims to answer is: Is topical sesame oil effective in preventing phlebitis at peripheral IV cannula sites in adult patients within a cardiovascular and cardiothoracic department of a tertiary hospital? Participants will be randomly allocated to the experimental or control group with the use of a randomisation software (MS excel). They will each have five drops/0.25mls of 100% sesame oil (experimental) or liquid paraffin oil (control) applied to the IV cannula site, at 12 hourly intervals for a total of 72 hours, from 3cm above the insertion point to 10cm along the vein, with a width of 2cm on either side. Researchers will compare the phlebitis incidence and severity of each group to see if topical sesame oil is more effective than liquid paraffin oil in preventing phlebitis at IV cannula sites in adult patients within a cardiovascular and cardiothoracic department of a tertiary hospital.
Nurses frequently use peripheral venous catheters in hospitals to provide medications and fluids for therapeutic and diagnostic purposes. Peripheral venous catheter use brought various problems, including phlebitis, infiltration, extravasation, ecchymosis, thrombophlebitis, and embolism, in addition to being a regularly utilized nursing practice. The literature used techniques like heat application, fist clenching, and proximal massage to lower the risk of thrombophlebitis and associated problems.
Background: To determine the effect of sesame oil in preventing phlebitis that may occur during intravenous therapy in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Material and Method: A randomized controlled interventional study will be conducted with patients treated in the coronary intensive care unit of a university hospital. The population of the study will be the patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit after cardiac surgery and administered parenteral amiodarone infusion. The power analysis was carried out by taking the study by. The sample size was determined as 44 patients. Personal Information Form and Visual Infusion Phlebitis Scale will be used to collect data. Sesame oil will be applied to the patients in the intervention group as 10 drops, 10 cm around the cannula, for 10 minutes. This administration will be repeated every eight hours during the 24-hour amiodarone infusion. No application will be made by the researcher to the patients in the control group. At the end of each 24 hours, patients in both groups will be evaluated by the investigator on the Visual Infusion Phlebitis Scale. Descriptive statistics, chi square, independent t test and Fisher's exact test will be used to evaluate the data.
Phlebitis is an inflammation of the tunica intima layer of the vein. Intravenous administration of drugs with high pH and osmolarity via a peripheral intravenous catheter damages the vascular structure, causing the drug to leak out of the vessel and cause phlebitis. Planning the care of the area where phlebitis occurs is the responsibility of the nurses. When phlebitis symptoms are seen, the infusion is terminated, the treatment is continued from another area, the extremity is elevated, and warm application is started. However, studies in the literature on what, how many degrees, how many times a day, and how long the warm application should be made are limited. Therefore, this planned thesis study was designed as a randomized controlled experimental study to determine the effect of warm wet application in the care of peripheral intravenous catheter-related phlebitis. The study will be carried out in Ordu University Training and Research Hospital oncology, hematology, palliative, infection, and obstetrics services. The population of the study will be the patients with phlebitis symptoms, and the sample will be 70 patients determined by G power analysis. Volunteer patients with phlebitis symptoms after drug infusion with a peripheral intravenous catheter will be included in the study. Data will be obtained using the "Patient Information Form", "Phlebitis Follow-up Form" and "Phlebitis Care Schedule". The patients included in the study will be divided into experimental and control groups by the randomization method. A warm wet compress will be applied to the phlebitis developing area of the patients in the experimental group, three times a day for three days. No intervention will be made in the control group. The data will be evaluated by using the SPSS 22.0 package program at a significance level of p<0.05 with a 95% confidence interval, and by Student-t or Mann-Whitney-U test in independent groups according to their suitability for normal distribution. It is thought that the results of the study will reduce the symptoms of phlebitis, guide nurses towards care and increase patient satisfaction.
This study, which has a quasi-experimental, prospective, and open-label randomized controlled design, was conducted to examine the effect of cold application on the development of phlebitis in patients receiving IV amiodarone infusion treatment. Study Hypotheses H0-1: There is no difference in the rate of development of phlebitis between the patients who received and who did not receive cold application during amiodarone IV infusion. H0-2: There is no difference in the grade of phlebitis between the patients who received and who did not receive cold application during amiodarone IV infusion. H0-3: There is no difference in the time of development of phlebitis between the patients who received and who did not receive cold application during amiodarone IV infusion.
Peripheral intravenous catheters have application such as fluid, blood, medication and feding fluids. Although it is a life-savingtool, it can lead to some complications as a result of incorrect applications. Phlebitis, which is defined as inflammation of the tunica intima layer of the vein, is characterized by pain, redness, tenderness, palpable stiffness and increased temperature. As can be seen during catheter application, it can develop within 48-96 hours after catheter removal. Instudies performed, the rate of phlebitis development was 0.1-63.3% in patients with peripheral intravenous catheters, in Turkey, this rate varies between 11% and 67%. Phlebitis; can be originated mechanical, chemical and bacterial. Various guidelines are available from evidence based on research results to prevent and reduce phlebitis development. In our country, National Vascular Access Management Guide is used. One of the principles in the National Guidelines for Vascular Access Management for the prevention of phlebitis is skin antisepsis. The guideline recommends a 70% alcohol solution containing>0.5% chlorhexidine for skin antisepsis and reports that povidone-iodine or only 70% alcohol solution can be used in the absence or contraindication. Infusion Nurses Society (INS, 2016) recommends using the 'Phlebitis Scale' in the early diagnosis of phlebitis. In this study, investigator aimed to compare the antiseptic effects of 2% chlorhexidine and 70% alcohol which are used as antiseptic in preventing phlebitis development while providing skin antisepsis, which is one of the basic principles in the application of peripheral intravenous catheter. This study is a randomized controlled clinical study and the population will consist of patients (participants)hospitalized in the Surgery -1 Department of Balcalı Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Çukurova University. As a data collection tool; 'Patient Information Form' and 'İnformation Form for İntravenous Catheter Application to the Patient' created by there searcher, to evaluate phlebitis formation "Phlebitis Scale'' which published by the Infusion Nurses Society (INS, 2016) will be used. A transparent millimeter ruler will be used
Pragmatic, randomized, single-blinded, controlled clinical trial of the effect of dressing and stabilization of peripheral intravenous catheters on the occurrence of phlebitis in adult patients attended at a hospital from the Western Brazilian Amazon.
This is an interventional multi-centre study comparing two groups of general practitioners with or without an ultrasound scanner over a period of 6 months. The evaluation focuses on the management of patients for 8 pathologies: - Pneumonia - Pleural effusion - Renal colic - Hepatic colic or cholecystitis - Subcutaneous abscess or cyst - Fracture of long bones - Intra-uterine pregnancy or extra-uterine pregnancy or miscarriage - Phlebitis The principal hypothesis is that there are fewer complementary exams in the group of doctors using ultrasound scanners. The secondary hypotheses are: - There is better patient orientation (emergency care, specialist consultation, return home) in the group of doctors using the ultrasound scanners. - The global cost of the care is lower in the group of doctors using the ultrasound. - Using ultrasound during the consultation decreases the anxiety of the patient. - Using ultrasound increases the duration of the consultation. - There is no difference between the predicted and the real orientation of the patients.
The aim of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of in-line filtration in reducing the incidence of postoperative phlebitis associated with peripheral short-term vascular access. In this controlled trial, 268 surgical patients are 1:1 randomised to in-line filtration (study group) and standard care (control group). The incidence of phlebitis (defined as Visual Infusion Phlebitis, VIP score≥2) within 48hrs postoperatively is compared between the two groups, as well as the onset and severity of phlebitis and the reasons for removal of the cannula. The lifespan of venous cannulae and cost-of-care are compared for the study and control groups through a Kaplan-Meier curve. Multivariate Cox regression analysis is performed to evaluate the effect of in-line filtration on risk of phlebitis and cannula removal.
This is a two-centers, open label, prospective, randomized, noninferiority controlled trial with cost-effectiveness analysis to verify if is non inferior to remove peripheral intravenous catheter according to clinical signs in relation to every 96 hours.