2.Clinical experience of REcanalisation and balloon-oriented puncture for Re-insertion of long- term dialysis catheter in nonpatent central veins.
Qiang LI ; Liang You ZHANG ; Gang Yi CHEN ; Shui Fu TANG
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2023;39(1):39-41
It is difficult to insert long-term dialysis catheters after severe stenosis or occlusion of the internal jugular vein and innominate vein. We used REcanalisation and balloon-oriented puncture for Re-insertion of dialysis catheter in nonpatent central veins (REBORN) in seven patients with severe central venous lesions, and all patients were inserted with long-term dialysis catheters successfully. None had severe complications such as pneumothorax, hemothorax, or pulmonary embolism during operation. All catheters functioned well after postoperative follow-up of 2 months. REBORN provides a novel approach to establish difficult dialysis pathways.
Humans
;
Catheterization, Central Venous/adverse effects*
;
Catheters, Indwelling
;
Renal Dialysis
;
Jugular Veins
;
Punctures
3.Efficacy and safety of early use of urokinase for prevention and treatment of tunneled hemodialysis catheter-related fibrin sheaths.
Xiaoting LI ; Ding LIU ; Yabin WANG ; Mo WANG ; Jun ZHANG ; Ying GUO
Journal of Southern Medical University 2014;34(11):1668-1671
OBJECTIVETo explore the clinical efficacy and safety of the early use of urokinase in the prevention and treatment on tunneled hemodialysis catheter related fibrin sheaths.
METHODSThirty-eight hemodialysis patients with tunneled central venous catheter and good catheter function were randomly divided into experimental group and control group. Urokinase was given after 3 days of indwelling catheter in the experimental group and after the onset of catheter dysfunction in the control group. The catheter function, mean blood flow and venous pressure of dialysis, coagulation, and side effects in the two groups were observed for 6 months.
RESULTSThe rates of catheter dysfunction on the arterial side were 0.65% and 2.71% in the experimental group and control group, respectively (P<0.05), with catheter dysfunction rates on the vein side of 0.92% and 2.41%, respectively (P<0.05). Catheter dysfunction occurred for the first time at 87.9 ± 24.1 days in the experimental group, and at 31.3 ± 11.5 days in the control group (P<0.05). The mean blood flow showed no significant difference between the two groups at 1 month after tube insertion (P>0.05), but was higher in the experimental group at 3 and 6 months after the tube insertion (P<0.05). The mean venous pressure in two groups was similar 1 and 3 months after tube insertion (P>0.05), but was significantly lower in the experimental group at 6 months (P<0.05). Compared with control group, the experimental group showed significantly prolonged prothrombin time (P<0.05) but similar rest coagulation parameters. No serious drug-related side effects occurred in these two groups.
CONCLUSIONEarly use of urokinase is safe and effective for prevention and treatment of tunneled hemodialysis catheter-related fibrin sheaths with minimal side effects.
Catheterization ; adverse effects ; Catheters, Indwelling ; Fibrin ; Humans ; Renal Dialysis ; adverse effects ; Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator ; therapeutic use
4.Late complications of spontaneous urethral erosion of a malleable penile prosthesis in a young patient.
Halil CIFTCI ; Ayhan VERIT ; Murat SAVAS
Singapore medical journal 2012;53(6):e120-1
While oral agents are currently suggested for the initial treatment of erectile dysfunction, penile prosthesis implantation (malleable or inflatable) is accepted as a third-line therapy if intracorporeal injection and intraurethral treatment fail as a secondary choice. Urethral erosion of the malleable penile prosthesis is a well-known complication, mostly due to the indwelling catheter. We report a case of urethral erosion of the malleable penile prosthesis after 23 years. The patient was a 45-year-old man without any underlying risk factors. He subsequently underwent a unilateral rod extraction under regional anaesthesia. It appears that urethral erosion of penile prostheses can appear at any time post operation, without any known facilitative factors and in any age group. Furthermore, simple office manoeuvres may not be possible in some patients.
Catheters, Indwelling
;
adverse effects
;
Erectile Dysfunction
;
surgery
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Penile Implantation
;
adverse effects
;
Penile Prosthesis
;
adverse effects
;
Prosthesis Failure
;
Time Factors
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Treatment Outcome
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Urethra
;
physiopathology
;
surgery
7.Surgical remodelling of haemodialysis fistula aneurysms.
Petr BACHLEDA ; Petr UTÍKAL ; Lucie KALINOVÁ ; Monika VÁCHALOVÁ
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2011;40(3):136-139
INTRODUCTIONOne complication of autogenous arteriovenous fistula (AVF) for haemodialysis is the formation of a venous aneurysm.
CLINICAL PICTUREThe clinical picture is typically an expanding aneurysm leading to skin atrophy and ulceration with the risk of rupture and infection. Aneurysm also reduces the potential cannulation area.
TREATMENTThe cases described here used a surgical 'remodelling' technique involving complete skeletonisation of the venous aneurysm, reduction of lumen diameter and retention of vein wall using a Hegar dilatator to remodel a new fistula.
OUTCOMESix patients were treated using this method and the arterior venous shunt (AVS) was used for haemodialysis the following day. No recurrent aneurysm developed.
CONCLUSIONRemodelling of aneurysmal AVF is an effective and low-risk option for managing this kind of complication, allowing direct access for haemodialysis.
Aneurysm ; etiology ; surgery ; Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical ; adverse effects ; Catheters, Indwelling ; Humans ; Postoperative Complications ; Renal Dialysis ; adverse effects ; methods ; Vascular Surgical Procedures
8.Retaining time of tympanic ventilation tube and aural complications.
Qi GUI ; Zhinan WANG ; Ping CHEN
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2009;23(22):1027-1029
OBJECTIVE:
To study the relationship of retaining time of tympanic ventilation tube and aural complications.
METHOD:
Three-hundred-five patients(659 ears)with otitis media with effusion (OME) received tympanostomy tube insertion. The tube were removed 6-36 months after tube insertion. Then aural complications were recorded in different tube retaining time, followed with a statistic analysis.
RESULT:
Fifty-five tubes of 29 patients were removed at 1-6 months after tube insertion, with spontaneous extrusion 3.4%, blocked tube 10.3%, intrusion into the middle ear 0, granulation tissue 0, cholesteatoma 0, otorrhea 6.9%, perforation 0. One hundred and ninety tubes of 96 patients were removed at 6-12 months after tube insertion , with spontaneous extrusion 7.3%, blocked tube 15.6%, intrusion into the middle ear 1%, granulation tissue 0, cholesteatoma 0, otorrhea 5.2%, perforation 0. Three hundred and eight tubes of 156 patients were removed at 12-24 months after tube insertion, with spontaneous extrusion 9%, blocked tube 12.8%, intrusion into the middle ear 1.3%, granulation tissue 1. 9%, cholesteatoma 0.6%, otorrhea 2.5%, perforation was 0. One hundred and sixty one tubes of 83 patients were removed at 24-36 months after tube insertion, with spontaneous extrusion 36.1%, blocked tube 53%, intrusion into the middle ear 6%, granulation tissue 3.6%, cholesteatoma 2.4%, otorrhea 2.4%, perforation 2.4%.
CONCLUSION
The occurrence of complication didn't increase with time going by when the ventilation tube retained less than two years. However, when the ventilation tube retained more than two years, the occurrence of spontaneous extrusion and blocked tube increased obviously.
Adolescent
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Catheters, Indwelling
;
adverse effects
;
Child
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Child, Preschool
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Ear Ventilation
;
adverse effects
;
instrumentation
;
Otitis Media with Effusion
;
complications
;
surgery
;
Time Factors
9.Modification of the right subclavian vein catheterization and its anatomic basis and techniques.
Guang-hui LUO ; Wen-jian LI ; Shi-zhen ZHONG ; Zhong-hua LI ; Ji FANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2005;118(8):645-653
BACKGROUNDSeveral million subclavian-vein catheters are placed in patients each year to enable caregivers to administer chemotherapy, total parenteral nutrition, or long-term antibiotics or to manage preoperative fluids. Subclavian venipuncture requires the position of a deep vein to be identified with only surface landmarks. But the traditional right subclavian vein (RSV) catheterization (primitive procedures) is not the answer for all patients. The precise location of the vein is not known, and it is important to select the most appropriate method to achieve central venous access safely in any given patient. To modify the primitive procedures of the RSV catheterization for greater success and reduce the complications, anatomic studies and ultrasonography were conducted and clinical applications were validated.
METHODSAnatomical observation and measurement of the RSV and its adjacent structures were performed on 20 adult cadavers according to modified procedures. The RSV catheterization of 2900 cases was carried out by the modified procedure, 500 of these cases were observed by ultrasonography after the operation.
RESULTSThe anatomical studies and clinical application showed that the insertion point differs from the bodily form of fatness or leptosome. The clinical data revealed that in the 2900 cases which were performed with the modified approach, the success rate was 98.90% (2868 cases), the failure rate was 1.10% (32 cases), and the complication rate is 0.79% (23 cases), and the catheterization time is (31.2 +/- 10.5) minutes. Five hundred and sixty cases of the RSV catheterization were carried out by the recommended insertion procedure; the results were compared with the modified approach and the traditional approach. The successful rate of the traditional approach was 73.0%, of which the complication rate was 6.1%; the two approaches were significantly different (successful rate: chi(2) = 626.642, P < 0.01; complication rate: chi(2) = 80.708, P< 0.01).
CONCLUSIONSThe modified RSV catheterization is characterized with a higher success rate and less complications, and the insertion procedure differs from the bodily form of fatness or leptosome.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Anti-Bacterial Agents ; pharmacology ; Catheterization, Central Venous ; adverse effects ; methods ; Catheters, Indwelling ; Child ; Humans ; Middle Aged ; Subclavian Vein ; anatomy & histology
10.Spontaneously Migrated Tip of an Implantable Port Catheter into the Axillary Vein in a Patient with Severe Cough and the Subsequent Intervention to Reposition It.
Kyung Sik AHN ; Kweon YOO ; In Ho CHA ; Tae Seok SEO
Korean Journal of Radiology 2008;9(Suppl):S81-S84
Migration of an implantable port catheter tip is one of the well-known complications of this procedure, but the etiology of this problem is not clear. We describe here a case of migration of the tip of a port catheter from the right atrium to the right axillary vein in a patient with severe cough. Coughing was suggested for this case as the cause of the catheter tip migration. We corrected the position of the catheter tip via transfemoral snaring.
Axillary Vein
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Catheters, Indwelling/*adverse effects
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Cough/*complications
;
Device Removal/*methods
;
Foreign-Body Migration/*etiology/radiography
;
Heart Atria
;
Humans
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Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy
;
Male
;
Middle Aged