Forum topic

5 posts / 0 new
Last post
PICC VAT rn
vesicants and midlines

Currently we use power glides and we do not infuse any vesicants via the power glide. We have an MD taking a concern in vascular access and is talking about starting to infuse vesicants via a power glide. We were only able to find one study done where Vanco was given for 6 days via midline. Just looking for any information, suggestions, etc. to help guide us. Thanks in advance.

lynncrni
 Are you placing a Powerglide

 Are you placing a Powerglide as a midline in the corkrect midline tip location or are you placing them in the forearm? A midline tip location is too deep in the tissue to easily detect an extravasation and it is not recommended according to the INS Standards of Practice. If you are using these 3 inch catheters in the forearm, the need for a longer catheter is usually driven by the veins lying deep in the tissue. AGain it would be most difficult to detect extravasation early. Additionally, midlines are famous for failing to produce a blood return, something that is needed for all VADs but especially for vesicant infusion before and during the infusion. Lynn

Lynn Hadaway, M.Ed., RN, NPD-BC, CRNI

Lynn Hadaway Associates, Inc.

PO Box 10

Milner, GA 30257

Website http://www.hadawayassociates.com

Office Phone 770-358-7861

PICC VAT rn
We are placing them in the

We are placing them in the upper arm

mkcrowe01
Hesitate to answer....

 I almost didn't reply to this. We place powerglides, mainly in the upper arm, occasionally will do a forearm (like < 1/month). We adamantly stress that these are peripheral lines and are governed by our peripheral IV policy. TWICE (!) in the last month I have come in the morning and a patient was receiving TPN (not PPN or clinimix, no it sure was D70W!) in their upper arm powerglide. head-into-wall, CRNI/VABC full blown panic mode, etc. Both patients were ok, still gave blood return, PICCs placed without incident, unusual occurrence reports entered. Staff reported not knowing that TPN was a vesicant. I will never recommend a midline for continuous infusion of a vesicant, and decline to insert when this is the planned therapy/speak about CVC/PICC or place PIV. But we often use these for intermittent or IVP vesicants without thinking about it - IV contrast? D50W? Unfortunately, I've had MDs order 1 time doses of 3%NS given over 5-6 hours, and staff just gave it through the powerglide already in place. As inserter, we can only assess the intended therapy when we place, which in an acute care facility often changes after we place the device. As the nurse administering the med, we need to properly assess the access device before, during, and after the infusions we give. 

 

Kathleen Crowe BSN RN CRNI VABC

lynncrni
 Totally correct! The nurse

 Totally correct! The nurse administering the fluid or medication is held to the same standard as an infusion nurse. There are not 2 separate standards. Knowing the solution you are infusing, where it is going, and how to infuse safely is basic nursing 101. Lynn

Lynn Hadaway, M.Ed., RN, NPD-BC, CRNI

Lynn Hadaway Associates, Inc.

PO Box 10

Milner, GA 30257

Website http://www.hadawayassociates.com

Office Phone 770-358-7861

Log in or register to post comments