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Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report

INTRODUCTION: Clinicians use either direct or indirect (Seldinger) techniques for internal juguler or subclavian vein catheterization. This report aims to point out that the success rate of the direct technique where the catheter is inserted directly through the cannula may be higher particularly in...

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Autores principales: Coskun, Demet, Mahli, Ahmet, Oncul, Sema, Ilvan, Gizem, Dalgic, Aydin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cases Network Ltd 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2740061/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19830041
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-7998
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author Coskun, Demet
Mahli, Ahmet
Oncul, Sema
Ilvan, Gizem
Dalgic, Aydin
author_facet Coskun, Demet
Mahli, Ahmet
Oncul, Sema
Ilvan, Gizem
Dalgic, Aydin
author_sort Coskun, Demet
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Clinicians use either direct or indirect (Seldinger) techniques for internal juguler or subclavian vein catheterization. This report aims to point out that the success rate of the direct technique where the catheter is inserted directly through the cannula may be higher particularly in catheterization of pediatric cases. CASE PRESENTATION: A 7.5-month-old female infant weighing 7200 gm was operated on for liver transplantation. The patient suffered jaundice at one month of age and was diagnosed with neonatal colestatic hepatitis. After routine monitoring, via indirect technique, central catheterization was attempted through internal jugular vein. However, the attempt failed. Therefore, again via indirect technique, catheterization was achieved through the right subclavian vein and fixed at 8 cm. After the operation started, fluid replacement and central venous pressure monitoring were performed with this catheter. Immediately after the operation, a control postero-anterior chest radiograph of the patient was obtained. This graph revealed that the tip of the catheter was fixed in the right internal jugular vein. Since the vital symptoms of the patient were not stable, the catheter was not removed and fluid replacement was performed via this technique. The catheter was removed on the postoperative 2(nd) day. CONCLUSION: The J wire advanced via the indirect technique advances anatomically following the upper wall of subclavian vein. Because of the smaller vessel dimensions and sharper, more angulated routes the subclavian and internal jugular veins make in infants, the rigid J wire may advance in the cephalic direction. However, in the technique where the catheter (Cavafix (®) catheter) is inserted directly through the cannula, this probability is less since J wire is not used and the catheter employed is flexible. We concluded that especially in pediatric cases, employment of the technique where the catheter is inserted directly through the cannula would be more convenient in order to decrease the catheter malpositioning probability.
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spelling pubmed-27400612009-10-14 Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report Coskun, Demet Mahli, Ahmet Oncul, Sema Ilvan, Gizem Dalgic, Aydin Cases J Case report INTRODUCTION: Clinicians use either direct or indirect (Seldinger) techniques for internal juguler or subclavian vein catheterization. This report aims to point out that the success rate of the direct technique where the catheter is inserted directly through the cannula may be higher particularly in catheterization of pediatric cases. CASE PRESENTATION: A 7.5-month-old female infant weighing 7200 gm was operated on for liver transplantation. The patient suffered jaundice at one month of age and was diagnosed with neonatal colestatic hepatitis. After routine monitoring, via indirect technique, central catheterization was attempted through internal jugular vein. However, the attempt failed. Therefore, again via indirect technique, catheterization was achieved through the right subclavian vein and fixed at 8 cm. After the operation started, fluid replacement and central venous pressure monitoring were performed with this catheter. Immediately after the operation, a control postero-anterior chest radiograph of the patient was obtained. This graph revealed that the tip of the catheter was fixed in the right internal jugular vein. Since the vital symptoms of the patient were not stable, the catheter was not removed and fluid replacement was performed via this technique. The catheter was removed on the postoperative 2(nd) day. CONCLUSION: The J wire advanced via the indirect technique advances anatomically following the upper wall of subclavian vein. Because of the smaller vessel dimensions and sharper, more angulated routes the subclavian and internal jugular veins make in infants, the rigid J wire may advance in the cephalic direction. However, in the technique where the catheter (Cavafix (®) catheter) is inserted directly through the cannula, this probability is less since J wire is not used and the catheter employed is flexible. We concluded that especially in pediatric cases, employment of the technique where the catheter is inserted directly through the cannula would be more convenient in order to decrease the catheter malpositioning probability. Cases Network Ltd 2009-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2740061/ /pubmed/19830041 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-7998 Text en © 2009 Coskun et al.; licensee Cases Network Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case report
Coskun, Demet
Mahli, Ahmet
Oncul, Sema
Ilvan, Gizem
Dalgic, Aydin
Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title_full Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title_fullStr Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title_short Malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
title_sort malposition of subclavian vein catheter inserted through indirect technique in a pediatric liver transplantation: a case report
topic Case report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2740061/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19830041
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-7998
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