Hickman-broviac catheter use in cancer patients
β Scribed by Zvi Landoy; Coleman Rotstein; Joyce Lucey; John Fitzpatrick
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 364 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Seventy-nine patients who had Hickman-Broviac (H-B) catheters inserted over a l-year period were studied. There were 52 patients in the hematological group and 27 patients .in the solid tumor group. Complications associated with the H-B cathethers were infection and venous thrombosis, with infection being more common. Nine patients experienced local infection, ten had local infection with bacteremia, and 14 had severe infection, respectively. Infectious complications were more prevalent in the hematological group; 13 of the 14 severe infections were found in patients with hematological disorders. Severe infection was more common in patients with two catheters in place as compared to those with only one catheter (P < 0.05). In particular, the presence of two catheters significantly increased the risk of infection in hematological patients. The risk of infection may be reduced by using only one catheter with either a single or double lumen.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Before administration of intensive cytotoxic therapy, 90 central venous catheters were inserted into 80 patients with malignancies. Twenty-seven episodes of bacteremia and fungemia occurred during 96 treatment courses. The majority of these infections were due to gram-positive bacteria (45%) or fung
Hickman catheters were the major venous access devices utilized at the University of Maryland Cancer Center from November 1978 to 1987. This study provided an opportunity to standardize insertion technique, to manage catheter-related activities and daily maintenance procedures in order to examine th