By admin September 08, 2006 Thanks to Jamie Santolucito and Oregon Health Sciences University Log in or register to post comments Comments I've never seen Permalink Submitted by windstringsSun Feb 17, 2008 05:02am I've never seen this.... is this an anomaly? Besides, it looks far too deep to me? Always remember that you're unique. Just like everyone else. The second mouse gets the cheese! Log in or register to post comments Looks like the patient may Permalink Submitted by NeurosurgeryNPWed Nov 26, 2008 03:11pm Looks like the patient may have situs inversus totalis - reversal/mirroring of the position of the intrathoracic and abdominal organs. Log in or register to post comments It should be consider to long Permalink Submitted by fizerjkFri Aug 21, 2009 09:08pm It should be consider to long it looks at though it may be in the region of the coronary sinus, not a place you would want a thrombus to form. It should be pulled back. Jeffery Fizer RN, BSN Log in or register to post comments It could also be Permalink Submitted by OzCVCGuyThu Oct 01, 2009 05:10am It could also be intra-arterial. Was this catheter transduced for waveform to confirm venous or arterial placement out of interest?? Timothy R. Spencer, RN, APN, DipAppSci, BH, ICU Cert, VA-BC™ That CVC guy from Australia :-} Log in or register to post comments
Comments
I've never seen
I've never seen this.... is this an anomaly?
Besides, it looks far too deep to me?
Always remember that you're unique. Just like everyone else.
The second mouse gets the cheese!
Looks like the patient may
It should be consider to long
It should be consider to long it looks at though it may be in the region of the coronary sinus, not a place you would want a thrombus to form. It should be pulled back.
Jeffery Fizer RN, BSN
It could also be
It could also be intra-arterial. Was this catheter transduced for waveform to confirm venous or arterial placement out of interest??
Timothy R. Spencer, RN, APN, DipAppSci, BH, ICU Cert, VA-BC™
That CVC guy from Australia :-}