Endo Hiroya, Sekiguchi Ryo, Kinoshita Michiko, Tanaka Katsuya
Department of Anesthesiology, Tokushima University Hospital, Tokushima, Japan.
Department of Anesthesiology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University Graduate School, Tokushima, Japan.
J Vasc Access. 2025 Jul;26(4):1280-1287. doi: 10.1177/11297298241273642. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
Venodilation is crucial in enhancing the success rate of peripheral intravenous cannulation. Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) is a vasodilatory response initiated by temporary ischemia followed by reperfusion. This crossover study aimed to test the hypothesis that FMD induces dilation of the peripheral veins of the forearm.
Fifteen healthy volunteers underwent the FMD and control conditions in a randomized order. FMD involved a 5-min occlusion of blood flow in the brachial artery, followed by reperfusion, achieved by inflating and deflating a cuff placed on the upper arm. The control condition involved participants remaining at rest. The primary outcome measure was a change in the cross-sectional area of the cephalic vein post-intervention. The secondary outcomes included changes in venous diameter and perfusion index (PI).
FMD significantly increased the cross-sectional area of the cephalic vein compared with the control condition (relative change to baseline: 37.7% (31.4) vs 2.2% (11.7)), with a mean difference of 35.4% (95% confidence interval (CI): 16.4-54.5, = 0.001). Both longitudinal and transverse diameters were significantly expanded with FMD compared to the control (relative change to baseline: 15.7% (15.4) vs 2.6% (3.6), = 0.004; 18.9% (15.6) vs -0.0 (10.2), = 0.003, respectively). Additionally, PI significantly increased with FMD compared with the control (relative change to baseline: 77.8% (56.9) vs 14.6% (36.0)), with a mean difference of 63.2% (95% CI: 31.2-95.2, = 0.001).
FMD application induced dilation of the cephalic vein of the forearm. The findings suggest that FMD is an effective technique for dilating the venous area and potentially improving the success rate of peripheral intravenous cannulation.
静脉扩张对于提高外周静脉置管成功率至关重要。血流介导的血管舒张(FMD)是一种由短暂缺血后再灌注引发的血管舒张反应。这项交叉研究旨在验证FMD可诱导前臂外周静脉扩张这一假设。
15名健康志愿者以随机顺序接受FMD和对照条件。FMD包括对肱动脉进行5分钟的血流阻断,然后通过对上臂放置的袖带充气和放气实现再灌注。对照条件是参与者保持休息。主要结局指标是干预后头静脉横截面积的变化。次要结局指标包括静脉直径和灌注指数(PI)的变化。
与对照条件相比,FMD显著增加了头静脉的横截面积(相对于基线的相对变化:37.7%(31.4)对2.2%(11.7)),平均差异为35.4%(95%置信区间(CI):16.4 - 54.5,P = 0.001)。与对照相比,FMD使纵向和横向直径均显著扩大(相对于基线的相对变化:15.7%(15.4)对2.6%(3.6),P = 0.004;18.9%(15.6)对 - 0.0(10.2),P = 0.003)。此外,与对照相比,FMD使PI显著增加(相对于基线的相对变化:77.8%(56.9)对14.6%(36.0)),平均差异为63.2%(95% CI:31.2 - 95.2,P = 0.001)。
应用FMD可诱导前臂头静脉扩张。研究结果表明,FMD是一种扩张静脉区域并可能提高外周静脉置管成功率的有效技术。