Clinical Procedures in Emergency Medicine 2010
DOI: 10.1016/b978-1-4160-3623-4.00020-1
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Arterial Puncture and Cannulation

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…A rterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is a commonly performed procedure that is often used to determine the acid-base and respiratory status of critical patients; however, this test can result in patient discomfort as well as complications such as arterial injury, thrombosis or embolization, hematoma, aneurysm formation, and reflex sympathetic dystrophy (1)(2)(3). In addition, the procedure has a small but appreciable risk for needlestick injury to health care workers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A rterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is a commonly performed procedure that is often used to determine the acid-base and respiratory status of critical patients; however, this test can result in patient discomfort as well as complications such as arterial injury, thrombosis or embolization, hematoma, aneurysm formation, and reflex sympathetic dystrophy (1)(2)(3). In addition, the procedure has a small but appreciable risk for needlestick injury to health care workers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This eliminates the need for repeated arterial or venous punctures . Other clinical indications include a failure of conventional, noninvasive measurements of blood pressure and to gain supplementary diagnostic information …”
Section: Arterial Catheterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Radial and femoral arterial catheterizations make up 92% of all arterial catheterizations . One of the primary reasons that these two arteries are preferred over others is to combat the possible complication of a hemorrhage, as they are both easily compressible arteries, although this trait is not exclusive to them. Other traits that make these two arteries appealing are their profile of consistent anatomic accessibility, lower complication rates, collateral blood flow, and accuracy of measurements …”
Section: Catheterization Of the Radial Arterymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contraindications for arterial line placement and transarterial access include [29]: absent pulse; thromboangiitis obliterans (Buerger disease); full-thickness burns over the cannulation site; inadequate circulation to the extremity e.g. Raynaud syndrome; inadequate collateral flow; infection at the cannulation site; previous surgery in the area; synthetic vascular graft.…”
Section: Indications and Contraindicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%