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Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques

OBJECTIVE: The ethanol lock technique has shown great potential to eradicate organisms in biofilms and to treat or prevent central venous catheter related infections. Following instillation of ethanol lock solution, however, the inherent density gradient between blood and ethanol causes gravity indu...

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Autores principales: Schilcher, Gernot, Schlagenhauf, Axel, Schneditz, Daniel, Scharnagl, Hubert, Ribitsch, Werner, Krause, Robert, Rosenkranz, Alexander R., Stojakovic, Tatjana, Horina, Joerg H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3877335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24391979
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084869
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author Schilcher, Gernot
Schlagenhauf, Axel
Schneditz, Daniel
Scharnagl, Hubert
Ribitsch, Werner
Krause, Robert
Rosenkranz, Alexander R.
Stojakovic, Tatjana
Horina, Joerg H.
author_facet Schilcher, Gernot
Schlagenhauf, Axel
Schneditz, Daniel
Scharnagl, Hubert
Ribitsch, Werner
Krause, Robert
Rosenkranz, Alexander R.
Stojakovic, Tatjana
Horina, Joerg H.
author_sort Schilcher, Gernot
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The ethanol lock technique has shown great potential to eradicate organisms in biofilms and to treat or prevent central venous catheter related infections. Following instillation of ethanol lock solution, however, the inherent density gradient between blood and ethanol causes gravity induced seepage of ethanol out of the catheter and blood influx into the catheter. Plasma proteins so are exposed to highly concentrated ethanol, which is a classic agent for protein precipitation. We aimed to investigate the precipitating effect of ethanol locks on plasma proteins as a possible cause for reported catheter occlusions. METHODS: Plasma samples were exposed in-vitro to ethanol (concentrations ranging from 7 to 70 v/v%) and heparin lock solutions. In catheter studies designed to mimic different in-vivo situations, the catheter tip was placed in a plasma reservoir and the material contained within the catheter was analyzed after ethanol lock instillation. The samples underwent standardized investigation for protein precipitation. RESULTS: Protein precipitation was observed in plasma samples containing ethanol solutions above a concentration of 28%, as well as in material retrieved from vertically positioned femoral catheters and jugular (subclavian) catheters simulating recumbent or head down tilt body positions. Precipitates could not be re-dissolved by dilution with plasma, urokinase or alteplase. Plasma samples containing heparin lock solutions showed no signs of precipitation. CONCLUSIONS: Our in-vitro results demonstrate that ethanol locks may be associated with plasma protein precipitation in central venous catheters. This phenomenon could be related to occlusion of vascular access devices locked with ethanol, as has been reported. Concerns should be raised regarding possible complications upon injection or spontaneous gravity induced leakage of such irreversibly precipitated protein particles into the systemic circulation. We suggest limiting the maximum advisable concentration of ethanol to 28 v/v% in catheter lock solutions.
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spelling pubmed-38773352014-01-03 Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques Schilcher, Gernot Schlagenhauf, Axel Schneditz, Daniel Scharnagl, Hubert Ribitsch, Werner Krause, Robert Rosenkranz, Alexander R. Stojakovic, Tatjana Horina, Joerg H. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: The ethanol lock technique has shown great potential to eradicate organisms in biofilms and to treat or prevent central venous catheter related infections. Following instillation of ethanol lock solution, however, the inherent density gradient between blood and ethanol causes gravity induced seepage of ethanol out of the catheter and blood influx into the catheter. Plasma proteins so are exposed to highly concentrated ethanol, which is a classic agent for protein precipitation. We aimed to investigate the precipitating effect of ethanol locks on plasma proteins as a possible cause for reported catheter occlusions. METHODS: Plasma samples were exposed in-vitro to ethanol (concentrations ranging from 7 to 70 v/v%) and heparin lock solutions. In catheter studies designed to mimic different in-vivo situations, the catheter tip was placed in a plasma reservoir and the material contained within the catheter was analyzed after ethanol lock instillation. The samples underwent standardized investigation for protein precipitation. RESULTS: Protein precipitation was observed in plasma samples containing ethanol solutions above a concentration of 28%, as well as in material retrieved from vertically positioned femoral catheters and jugular (subclavian) catheters simulating recumbent or head down tilt body positions. Precipitates could not be re-dissolved by dilution with plasma, urokinase or alteplase. Plasma samples containing heparin lock solutions showed no signs of precipitation. CONCLUSIONS: Our in-vitro results demonstrate that ethanol locks may be associated with plasma protein precipitation in central venous catheters. This phenomenon could be related to occlusion of vascular access devices locked with ethanol, as has been reported. Concerns should be raised regarding possible complications upon injection or spontaneous gravity induced leakage of such irreversibly precipitated protein particles into the systemic circulation. We suggest limiting the maximum advisable concentration of ethanol to 28 v/v% in catheter lock solutions. Public Library of Science 2013-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3877335/ /pubmed/24391979 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084869 Text en © 2013 Schilcher et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schilcher, Gernot
Schlagenhauf, Axel
Schneditz, Daniel
Scharnagl, Hubert
Ribitsch, Werner
Krause, Robert
Rosenkranz, Alexander R.
Stojakovic, Tatjana
Horina, Joerg H.
Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title_full Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title_fullStr Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title_full_unstemmed Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title_short Ethanol Causes Protein Precipitation—New Safety Issues for Catheter Locking Techniques
title_sort ethanol causes protein precipitation—new safety issues for catheter locking techniques
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3877335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24391979
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084869
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