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Conventional vs Ultrasound Guided Arteria Cannulation.

A

Aarhus University Hospital Skejby

Status

Completed

Conditions

Disorder of Cardiac Function

Treatments

Procedure: Traditional palpation technique
Procedure: Ultrasound DNTP

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01690416
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Overlæge Dr. Med Edgar Schnohr (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of the project is to compare two methods for arterial cannulation. The traditional method with ultrasound guided cannulation. The investigators goal is to improve this procedure to reduce pain and complications.

Full description

The practice of placing vascular catheters is used many times every day at almost every hospital. It is a safe procedure which generally does not imply problems. Though the procedural optimum aren't reached. The procedure still fails some times and induce complications. When the catheter is placed using the traditional method the pulse is palpated by the operator's fingers. This is only to be done near the hand wrist. In this position the catheter steadiness is fragile but because the pulse can't be sensed more proximal the operator is forced to choose this position. This it though a problem that can be solved by non invasive visualization technology. Ultrasound-guidance for central vascular access is already well-established. However, in recent years ultrasound-guidance for peripheral vascular access has gained popularity too. The evidence of multiple studies demonstrates increased success rate and reduced complication rate with ultrasound compared to blind landmark technique for vascular catheter placement.

In recent years there have been both procedural technique and technology improvements in the field of ultrasound. This has led to the improvement of procedural catheterisation techniques that now can be done by novices with higher attempt success rate than traditional method. One technique that is gaining success is the short-axis-out-of-plane technique (SAX-OOP) with dynamic-needle-tip-tracking (DNTT).Using the ultrasound machine the needle can be placed in a more proximal direction on the forearm and the investigators believe that by the help of the exposed procedure on the monitor many complications can be reduced.

It has been shown that inexperienced trainees lear the technique SAX-OOP and DNTT very quickly.

First investigators hypothesize that the number of attempts, the number of withdrawals, the time spend and the number of utilized catheters will be decreased using ultrasound vs. the traditional method. Secondly investigators hypothesize that the pain induced by the conventional method inclusive preoperational lidocaine injection will be the same or more intense than using DNTT with local anesthesia. Thirdly investigators claim that the best anatomical place to put the catheter isn't always corresponding with the spot chosen by palpation, which increase the number of failures. Fourthly investigators hypothesize that the use of ultrasound will increase the operator's subjective feeling of having accomplished a successful procedure.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 20-90 years
  • Fulfill the criteria of an operation
  • Routine need of an arterial needle

Exclusion criteria

  • Lack of patient consent
  • Ultrasound identified plaques in the radial artery or ultrasound verified compromised flow in either the radial or ulnar artery.

Trial design

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Ultrasound DNTP
Active Comparator group
Description:
the catheter will be placed using ultrasound and DNTT and Lidocaine as local anesthesia, by the same fellow as the one who performs the puncture with the traditional method
Treatment:
Procedure: Traditional palpation technique
Procedure: Ultrasound DNTP
Traditional palpation technique
Active Comparator group
Description:
arteria cannulation by traditional palpation technique, using preprocedural lidocaine for anesthetic and palpation method by a fellow
Treatment:
Procedure: Traditional palpation technique
Procedure: Ultrasound DNTP

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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