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Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement

Background. Dislocation of epidural catheters (EC) is associated with early termination of regional analgesia and rare complications like epidural bleeding. We tested the hypothesis that maximum effort in fixation by tunneling and suture decreases the incidence of catheter dislocation. Methods. Pati...

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Autores principales: Sellmann, Timur, Bierfischer, Victoria, Schmitz, Andrea, Weiss, Martin, Rabenalt, Stefanie, MacKenzie, Colin, Kienbaum, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4130313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25140337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/610635
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author Sellmann, Timur
Bierfischer, Victoria
Schmitz, Andrea
Weiss, Martin
Rabenalt, Stefanie
MacKenzie, Colin
Kienbaum, Peter
author_facet Sellmann, Timur
Bierfischer, Victoria
Schmitz, Andrea
Weiss, Martin
Rabenalt, Stefanie
MacKenzie, Colin
Kienbaum, Peter
author_sort Sellmann, Timur
collection PubMed
description Background. Dislocation of epidural catheters (EC) is associated with early termination of regional analgesia and rare complications like epidural bleeding. We tested the hypothesis that maximum effort in fixation by tunneling and suture decreases the incidence of catheter dislocation. Methods. Patients scheduled for major surgery (n = 121) were prospectively randomized in 2 groups. Thoracic EC were subcutaneously tunneled and sutured (tunneled) or fixed with adhesive tape (taped). The difference of EC length at skin surface level immediately after insertion and before removal was determined and the absolute values were averaged. Postoperative pain was evaluated by numeric rating scale twice daily and EC tips were screened microbiologically after removal. Results. Both groups did not differ with respect to treatment duration (tunneled: 109 hours ±46, taped: 97 ± 37) and postoperative pain scores. Tunneling significantly reduced average extent (tunneled: 3 mm ±7, taped: 10 ± 18) and incidence of clinically relevant EC dislocation (>20 mm, tunneled: 1/60, taped: 9/61). Bacterial contamination showed a tendency to be lower in patients with tunneled catheters (8/59, taped: 14/54, P = 0.08). Conclusion. Thorough fixation of EC by tunneling and suturing decreases the incidence and extent of dislocation and potentially even that of bacterial contamination.
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spelling pubmed-41303132014-08-19 Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement Sellmann, Timur Bierfischer, Victoria Schmitz, Andrea Weiss, Martin Rabenalt, Stefanie MacKenzie, Colin Kienbaum, Peter ScientificWorldJournal Clinical Study Background. Dislocation of epidural catheters (EC) is associated with early termination of regional analgesia and rare complications like epidural bleeding. We tested the hypothesis that maximum effort in fixation by tunneling and suture decreases the incidence of catheter dislocation. Methods. Patients scheduled for major surgery (n = 121) were prospectively randomized in 2 groups. Thoracic EC were subcutaneously tunneled and sutured (tunneled) or fixed with adhesive tape (taped). The difference of EC length at skin surface level immediately after insertion and before removal was determined and the absolute values were averaged. Postoperative pain was evaluated by numeric rating scale twice daily and EC tips were screened microbiologically after removal. Results. Both groups did not differ with respect to treatment duration (tunneled: 109 hours ±46, taped: 97 ± 37) and postoperative pain scores. Tunneling significantly reduced average extent (tunneled: 3 mm ±7, taped: 10 ± 18) and incidence of clinically relevant EC dislocation (>20 mm, tunneled: 1/60, taped: 9/61). Bacterial contamination showed a tendency to be lower in patients with tunneled catheters (8/59, taped: 14/54, P = 0.08). Conclusion. Thorough fixation of EC by tunneling and suturing decreases the incidence and extent of dislocation and potentially even that of bacterial contamination. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2014 2014-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4130313/ /pubmed/25140337 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/610635 Text en Copyright © 2014 Timur Sellmann et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Study
Sellmann, Timur
Bierfischer, Victoria
Schmitz, Andrea
Weiss, Martin
Rabenalt, Stefanie
MacKenzie, Colin
Kienbaum, Peter
Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title_full Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title_fullStr Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title_full_unstemmed Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title_short Tunneling and Suture of Thoracic Epidural Catheters Decrease the Incidence of Catheter Dislodgement
title_sort tunneling and suture of thoracic epidural catheters decrease the incidence of catheter dislodgement
topic Clinical Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4130313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25140337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/610635
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