Search results for "Arterial catheter"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
PiCCO plus: monitorización cardiopulmonar mínimamente invasiva
2008
Insertion of a central venous catheter and an arterial catheter would be indicated in hemodynamically unstable or severely hypoxic patients in critical care units. In this setting, cardiorespiratory monitoring by transpulmonary thermodilution (TPTD) can be considered minimally invasive given that only a single arterial thermodilution catheter and a single central venous catheter are required to be connected to a specific monitor (the PiCCO Plus, Pulsion Medical Systems, Munich, Germany). TDTP simultaneously measures cardiac output, preloading, and cardiac function in hemodynamically unstable patients and predicts the response to volume. The technique can be managed by any health care profes…
Ventilation workshop - a new concept
2000
The use of simulator technology to practise crisis resource management or to train standardised procedures in anaesthesia is a proved concept, although its setup in clinical practice is still in progress. To get a better understanding of the complex pathophysiological and clinical relations in the pulmonary system and the kind of alterations that could be induced by changing the ventilation of an intensive care unit patient, we modified the current concept. We created a workshop, which employs more than just the simulator training in the classical sense. During this workshop the participants attend one patient from admission to an emergency room, until discharge from an intensive care unit …
Dressings and Securement Devices of Peripheral Arterial Catheters in Intensive Care Units and Operating Theaters
2020
Background: Hemodynamic monitoring, implemented by the placement of peripheral arterial catheters (PACs), is a characterizing aspect of the intensive care units. Peripheral arterial catheters can continually detect blood pressure and quickly conduct blood sampling. The use of PACs is generally considered safe, without serious complications. Currently, only 25% of the implanted catheters are actually subject to complications, including accidental removal, dislocation, occlusion, and infection. All of these complications arise from inadequate catheter stabilization at the level of the skin. This study aimed to summarize and describe the effectiveness and characteristics of dressings and secur…