Central Venous Access: Arterial Complications

Central lines are something we routinely do but can and do lead to complications. Complications include pneumothorax, dysrhythmias, guidewire loss, and of course arterial cannulation. We will focus mostly on talking about arterial cannulation and arterial dilation/insertion of a catheter. Arterial injury occurs in less than 1% of catheter placements, but arterial puncture occurs in 4.2–9.3% of line placements. Most of the time it is often easily recognized secondary to pulsatile flow, the artery is not dilated, and pressure is held with no complications. Hematoma formation has been reported in up to 4.7% of all catheter placements. Hematoma formation is often not life-threatening.


Complications from arterial puncture, and especially arterial dilation & catheter insertion include AV fistula, arterial thrombosis & subsequent stroke, arterial pseudoaneurysm, & arterial dissection. Immediate removal of an accidental arterial catheter can result in uncontrolled hemorrhage so the catheter should be left in place for removal by interventional radiology or vascular surgery (direct suture repair, percutaneous closure device, stent-graft insertion). Studies have demonstrated that leaving the arterial catheter in place with prompt repair carries less morbidity and mortality than catheter removal with pressure. 


Discerning if you are in the artery or vein 


  1. Ultrasound can be used to confirm appropriate guidewire placement in the venous system prior to dilation

  2. Venous pressure waveform on CVP monitor (applies more for ICU)

  3. Watch for pulsatile flow, but recognition may be difficult in a hypotensive patient, which are a significant portion of patients who are getting central access

  4. Send off blood gas and decide if it is a VBG or ABG (but VBG may resemble ABG in a hyperoxic patient on high FiO2) 

  5. Confirmation using angiocath in the central line kit in conjunction with the extension tubing and evaluating the column of blood in the extension tube. Dr. Strayer has a complete description here. https://emupdates.com/catheter-in-artery-vs-vein/

  6. CxR showing catheter going towards RA (venous) vs LV (arterial). However, with this method, confirmation is achieved only after dilation. 


If inadvertent arterial insertion fails to be recognized, further complications can arise from infusion of vasopressors into arterial circulation, such as ischemic stroke. 


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4613416/

https://www.reliasmedia.com/articles/131944-complications-of-tubes-and-lines-part-i

https://emupdates.com/catheter-in-artery-vs-vein/


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POTD: Emergent Trach Complications

 Most common Tracheostomy Complaints Include the Following:

o   Dislodgement

o   Decannulation

 

Equipment:

o   3 parts  (past photo)

o   Outer cannula (rigid)

  • §  Top portion of the trach is called the neck plate

    ·      On the right upper hand corner you will find all the information you need in terms of sizing

  • o   Size 4, 6, 8 is the measurement of the inner diameter

o   Inner cannula

  • §  Must be inserted into the outer cannula to be able to bag the patient or connect the patient to the vent

  • §  You do not need the inner cannula if the patient is trach to air

o   Obturator  

  • §  The most distal portion of the outer cannula is blunt and has sharp edges the obturator prevents you from causing any damage when inserting the outer cannula

Important things to know when you get a tach patient

o   Size ( 4,6,8)

o   Cuffed or uncuffed

o   Reason for Trach

o   Date of placement

o   Stoma healing roughly 7-10 days

  • §  Increased risk of creating a fall passage if you replace the trach within 10days

 

Uncuffed trach are mostly used in patients to allow them to speak. If you need to ventilate a patient you must have a cuffed trach

 

Step-wise Management  of Patient with respiratory Distress in the Setting of a Trach

o   Default action for all patients in respiratory distress is to bag the face and the neck

o   High flow or PPV

o   How to bag the stoma if the trach is dislodged

o   Pediatric BVM

o   LMA (inflate a size 3 or 4  LMA and seal it around the stoma)

o   Remove the inner cannula and clean it. Replace it with either a new one or the clean one

o   Insert a sterile in-line suction catheter

o   If you can only insert the suction 1-2cm your tube is either dislodged or obstructed

o   If suctioning fails will need to deflate the cuff and push it in further and re-inflate it

o   If deflating the cuff fails will need to remove the trach tube

o   Can now intubate through the stoma or oropharynx

 Laryngectomy patient:

o   Cannot intubate through the mouth must go through the stoma

 If inserting an ET tube into the stoma only go until you loose site of the cuff then stop and inflate. Very short distance the tube needs to travel for a trach compared to an oropharyngeal intubation

 Algorithm

o   Green Algorithm (patent upper airway)

o   Red Algorithm (laryngectomy patient)

References:

o   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szNsOtwEU8k

o   https://emcrit.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/guidelines-trach-emergencies.pdf

o   https://wikem.org/wiki/Tracheostomy_complications

o   http://www.emdocs.net/trach-travails-need-to-know-ed-tricks-for-airway-emergencies-in-tracheostomy-patients/

o   https://first10em.com/tracheostomy/

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Monitor Tips & Tricks

On this next episode of "useful things that RN Minh taught me", let's go over some neat tricks to effectively using our patient monitors!

Specifically,

  • How to change the screen layout to display big numbers

  • Show a 12 lead ECG

  • Turn on the volume (so one can hear the changes in changing vitals)

  • Change the alarm ranges