Elimination of mechanical failure of the Hickman right atrial catheter.
The double lumen Hickman right atrial catheter (Evermed Co., Palo Alto, Calif.) is usually inserted through an open venous cutdown into the internal jugular or cephalic vein. It is difficult to mechanically secure. Tight ligatures around the vein opening and catheter occlude the lumen of the Silastic rubber catheter while loose ligatures allow slippage. Migration of the tip into the vena cava or innominate vein causes fibrin sleeve formation and occlusion. Because of problems during the initial use of this catheter, we modified a subsequent series by placing a Silastic rubber bead on the catheter. The catheter is carefully trimmed so that the tip will lie in the right atrium and the bead is placed into the vein proximal to the securing ligature. Comparison of the two series of primarily leukemic patients revealed complete elimination of mechanical problems in patients with beaded catheters (0/18), and significant mechanical failure in unbeaded catheters (7/23). These data indicate that adequate fixation of the Hickman catheter at the level of the venotomy and placement of the tip in the right atrium eliminates mechanical failure and markedly improves catheter function.[1]References
- Elimination of mechanical failure of the Hickman right atrial catheter. Popp, M.B., Kirkpatrick, D.D., Lacy, J.H., Stahl, D.L. J. Surg. Res. (1986) [Pubmed]
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