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Often in emergencies and other medical situations, doctors must gain vascular access (access to the blood stream) in order to give drugs and/or fluids to patients. The most common way to gain vascular access is to place a needle into a vein through the skin, but sometimes this is not possible. Another way to gain vascular access is to insert a needle through the skin, into the bone and give drugs and/or fluids to patients through the center of the bone, which is hollow and contains blood vessels. This is called intraosseous (IO) vascular access. One device used to gain intraosseous vascular access is called the EZ-IO® Intraosseous Vascular Access System and it can be used in the proximal humerus (upper arm bone), proximal tibia (upper shin bone), and the distal tibia (lower shin bone). The EZ-IO has been cleared by the FDA to establish IO vascular access in the sites identified above for the infusion of drugs and fluids anytime vascular access is difficult to obtain in emergent, urgent, or medically necessary cases.
IV fluids and medicines must be infused into a patient's blood stream at different speeds depending upon what is being infused. Some IV fluids and medications must be given slowly and some must be given quickly. How fast IV fluids and medicines are infused into the blood stream is called infusion flow rate. One way to increase the infusion flow rate is to apply pressure to (squeeze) the IV fluid bag being used. This is done by applying a pressure bag around the IV fluid bag, which acts like a blood pressure cuff and inflates when pumped up. The purpose of this study is to see how quickly IV fluids can be infused into your blood stream through the proximal humerus (upper arm bone) and the proximal tibia (upper shin bone) by measuring the infusion flow rate. We want to see how fast IV fluids can be infused into your blood stream at different infusion pressures. We will also look at the route the fluid travels from the IO needle in your arm and leg to the heart.
Another purpose of the study is to determine if blood drawn from the bone can be used for laboratory tests the same as blood drawn from a vein or collected using a finger stick.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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