TY - JOUR
T1 - Soft catheters reduce the risk of intravascular cannulation during epidural block - A retrospective analysis of 1117 cases in a medical center
AU - Shih, Chih Kai
AU - Wang, Fu Yuan
AU - Shieh, Chia Fang
AU - Huang, Jui Mei
AU - Lu, I. Cheng
AU - Wu, Li Chen
AU - Lu, David Vi
PY - 2012/7
Y1 - 2012/7
N2 - A wet or bloody tap is an inevitable complication while performing epidural block. The influence of different catheters on the incidence of intravascular cannulation during epidural catheterization has not been reported. We observed an initial, relatively different incidence of intravascular cannulation during the placement of different sorts of epidural catheter; hence, a retrospective review was conducted to explore the possible association. We reviewed 1-year interval anesthetic records of 1117 patients who had undergone epidural anesthesia or received patient-controlled epidural analgesia. Epidural catheter placement was performed by a loss of resistance technique with an 18-G Tuohy needle in lateral position. Patients were divided into two groups according to the different types of epidural catheters used (Perifix One, n = 590; Perifix Standard, n = 527). Primary outcome measurement was the incidence of intravascular injection. Other analyzed outcomes included dura puncture, failure rate, and low back pain. The incidence of epiduralintravascular cannulation was significantly lower using the Perifix One catheter (1.5%; 9/590) than using the Perifix Standard (4.6%; 24/527), p = 0.003. The dura puncture rate did not differ significantly between the Perifix One (1.9%; 11/590) and the Perifix Standard (2.5%; 13/527), p = 0.49. Failure rates and low back pain incidence were also comparable between the two groups. Application of the soft epidural catheter (Perifix One) may reduce the incidence of epidural intravascular cannulation. We suggest the use of Perifix One catheter instead of Perifix Standard catheter in daily practice.
AB - A wet or bloody tap is an inevitable complication while performing epidural block. The influence of different catheters on the incidence of intravascular cannulation during epidural catheterization has not been reported. We observed an initial, relatively different incidence of intravascular cannulation during the placement of different sorts of epidural catheter; hence, a retrospective review was conducted to explore the possible association. We reviewed 1-year interval anesthetic records of 1117 patients who had undergone epidural anesthesia or received patient-controlled epidural analgesia. Epidural catheter placement was performed by a loss of resistance technique with an 18-G Tuohy needle in lateral position. Patients were divided into two groups according to the different types of epidural catheters used (Perifix One, n = 590; Perifix Standard, n = 527). Primary outcome measurement was the incidence of intravascular injection. Other analyzed outcomes included dura puncture, failure rate, and low back pain. The incidence of epiduralintravascular cannulation was significantly lower using the Perifix One catheter (1.5%; 9/590) than using the Perifix Standard (4.6%; 24/527), p = 0.003. The dura puncture rate did not differ significantly between the Perifix One (1.9%; 11/590) and the Perifix Standard (2.5%; 13/527), p = 0.49. Failure rates and low back pain incidence were also comparable between the two groups. Application of the soft epidural catheter (Perifix One) may reduce the incidence of epidural intravascular cannulation. We suggest the use of Perifix One catheter instead of Perifix Standard catheter in daily practice.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.kjms.2012.02.004
DO - 10.1016/j.kjms.2012.02.004
M3 - Article
C2 - 22726899
AN - SCOPUS:84862878555
VL - 28
SP - 373
EP - 376
JO - Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences
JF - Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences
SN - 1607-551X
IS - 7
ER -