OBJECTIVE:
Midline catheters are considered “midway” regarding vascular access. The objective of this systematic review was to explore the current practice, dwell time, and complication rates of midline catheters.
DESIGN:
Systematic review.
SETTING:
Search on four databases, PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, and Embase, were conducted for English language articles published after the year 2000.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
A total of 987 articles were identified, of which 31 manuscripts met the inclusion criteria and were selected for review. Quality assurance was performed based on the Newcastle-Ottawa score. Average dwell time and complication rates were calculated for studies involving adult patients and adjusted for sample size. This analysis included data from the placement of 18,972 midline catheters across five countries. Aside from two randomized control trials, most of the studies analyzed were cohort studies. One pediatric and two neonatal studies were included. The average dwell time was 16.3 days (n = 4,412). The adjusted mean infection rate was 0.28/1,000 catheter days, with 64% of studies not reporting any infection with midline catheter. The failure rate of midline catheters was 12.5%. Adjusted average rates of other significant complications included the following: deep vein thrombosis (4.1%), dislodgement (5.0%), occlusion (3.8%), phlebitis (3.4%), and infiltration (1.9%).
Conclusions:
The dwell times and failure rates of midline catheters compare favorably against published data on other types of catheters. Their infection rates are also lower than the reported rates of central venous catheters; however, they have a higher rate of mechanical complications. Active surveillance of infections due to midline catheters is recommended. More data are needed from pediatric and neonatal populations.
Background: In the past, rice genome served as a good model for studies involving comparative genomics of grass species. More recently, however, Brachypodium distachyon genome has emerged as a better model system for genomes of temperate cereals including wheat. During the present study, Brachypodium EST contigs were utilized to resolve orthologous relationships among the genomes of Brachypodium, wheat and rice.
We recently developed a database for hexaploid wheat QTL (WheatQTLdb; www.wheatqtldb.net) that included 11,552 QTL affecting various traits of economic importance. However, that database did not include valuable QTL from other wheat species and/or progenitors of bread wheat. Therefore, an updated and wider version of wheat QTL database (WheatQTLdb V2.0) was developed in this study which now includes information on hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum) as well as seven other related species: T. durum, T. turgidum, T. dicoccoides, T. dicoccum, T. monococcum, T. boeoticum, and Aegilops tauschii. WheatQTLdb V2.0 includes a much improved list of QTL, so that V2.0 now has 27,518 main-effect QTL, 202 epistatic QTL, and 1,321 metaQTL. This newly released WheatQTLdb V2.0 will provide plant breeders and geneticists much more valuable options to search and choose the category-wise and trait-wise data for their research or breeding programmes.
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