Division of Cardiac Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2022 May 1;23(5):e257-e266. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000002919. Epub 2022 Mar 7.
Umbilical venous cannulation is the favored approach to perinatal central access worldwide but has a failure rate of 25-50% and the insertion technique has not evolved in decades. Improving the success of this procedure would have broad implications, particularly where peripherally inserted central catheters are not easily obtained and in neonates with congenital heart disease, in whom umbilical access facilitates administration of inotropes and blood products while sparing vessels essential for later cardiac interventions. We sought to use real-time, point-of-care ultrasound to achieve central umbilical venous access in patients for whom conventional, blind placement techniques had failed.
Multicenter case series, March 2019-May 2021.
Cardiac and neonatal ICUs at three tertiary care children's hospitals.
We identified 32 neonates with congenital heart disease, who had failed umbilical venous cannulation using traditional, blind techniques.
Real-time ultrasound guidance and liver pressure were used to replace malpositioned catheters and achieve successful placement at the inferior cavoatrial junction.
In 32 patients with failed prior umbilical venous catheter placement, real-time ultrasound guidance was used to successfully "rescue" the line and achieve central position in 23 (72%). Twenty of 25 attempts (80%) performed in the first 48 hours of life were successful, and three of seven attempts (43%) performed later. Twenty-four patients (75%) were on prostaglandin infusion at the time of the procedure. We did not identify an association between patient weight or gestational age and successful placement.
Ultrasound guidance has become standard of care for percutaneous central venous access but is a new and emerging technique for umbilical vessel catheterization. In this early experience, we report that point-of-care ultrasound, together with liver pressure, can be used to markedly improve success of placement. This represents a significant advance in this core neonatal procedure.
脐静脉插管是全球围产期中心置管的首选方法,但失败率为 25-50%,而且插入技术几十年来没有任何进展。提高这一程序的成功率将具有广泛的意义,特别是在难以获得外周插入中心导管的情况下,以及在患有先天性心脏病的新生儿中,脐静脉置管有助于给予正性肌力药物和血制品,同时避免对以后心脏介入至关重要的血管。我们试图使用实时、即时护理超声来实现中心脐静脉置管,适用于那些使用传统盲插技术失败的患者。
2019 年 3 月至 2021 年 5 月的多中心病例系列研究。
三家三级儿童医院的心脏和新生儿重症监护病房。
我们确定了 32 名患有先天性心脏病的新生儿,他们使用传统的盲插技术未能成功进行脐静脉插管。
使用实时超声引导和肝脏压力来更换错位的导管,并在下腔静脉与心房连接部成功置管。
在 32 名先前脐静脉导管放置失败的患者中,实时超声引导成功地“挽救”了导管,并在 23 名患者(72%)中成功实现中心位置。在生命的前 48 小时内进行的 25 次尝试中有 20 次(80%)成功,7 次尝试中有 3 次(43%)成功。在进行手术时,24 名患者(75%)正在输注前列腺素。我们没有发现患者体重或胎龄与成功置管之间的关联。
超声引导已成为经皮中心静脉置管的标准护理方法,但对于脐血管置管来说是一种新的、新兴的技术。在这一早期经验中,我们报告即时护理超声与肝脏压力一起可以显著提高置管成功率。这代表了这一核心新生儿操作的重大进展。