Are there any medical people here?

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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I'm looking for some info on IV Therapy. If you have some knowledge on this subject and wouldn't mind answering some questions, please PM me or email me at (MyUsername)@mail.com
 

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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It is in regards to self-administered antibiotics. Specifically, the different types of catheters (mid line, central line) and the placement of them.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
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<< It is in regards to self-administered antibiotics. Specifically, the different types of catheters (mid line, central line) and the placement of them. >>

Um, all you need is IV tubing, an IV catheter (Jelco, Optiva, etc.) and a vein for antibiotics. Central line IV catheters are a totally different beast, and something you could kill yourself attempting to do unless you're qualified.

Are you talking about a PICC line?
 

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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<< something you could kill yourself attempting to do unless you're qualified. >>


I assume it was the 'self administered antibiotics' that made you think this might be a total 'do-it-yourself' project. :)
Self administered refers to teaching the patient to inject the saline solution, antibiotics and anti-coagulant themselves rather than requiring hospitalization or doing it on an outpatient basis.
My question is:
Would a central line catheter be ran from the upper thigh to the SVC, or are all central lines inserted from the upper arm, chest area or jugular?
 

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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I won't know until Monday just what type of central line catheter it will be. It looks like the different types are:
tunneled and nontunneled lines, implanted ports and
peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs)

I'm assuming that it will be a PICC.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
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<< I assume it was the 'self administered antibiotics' that made you think this might be a total 'do-it-yourself' project. >>

I had a mental image of someone trying to insert this themselves. hehe

<< Would a central line catheter be ran from the upper thigh to the SVC, or are all central lines inserted from the upper arm, chest area or jugular? >>

There are three main central venous access sites; subclavian, internal jugular, and femoral. They all use a catheter of required length to reach the SVC. Wow, I've seen a hundred of them, but I left the medical field three years ago and its all becoming a blur now. I guess if you don't use it, you lose it.

A PICC line is the same thing, except it is typically a smaller diameter tube and is inserted into a large vein in the arm (cubital, cephalic, etc.). The delivery port is usually just like an IV piggy-back port, not an implant.

 

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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Thanks for the info. :)
(And sorry for not making it clearer about the self administered part lol)

So it is done by the subclavian, internal jugular, femoral or arm? I haven't found anything anywhere that mentions upper thigh but I did see where it could be 24-28 inches long. I just can't imagine reaching the SVC from there though.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,896
553
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<< subclavian, internal jugular, femoral or arm >>

Upper thigh would be a femoral line. This is used only when the sites of choice (subclavian and jugular) fail, or when a large bore vein is needed for high volume infusion during cardiac arrest, trauma, etc.
 

DealDough

Junior Member
May 24, 2001
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Thanks again for the info.
I didn't realize that the upper thigh would be a femoral line, that was what was confuzzling me.
I appreciate you taking the time to enlighten me. I didn't have the patience (patience - patients. no pun intended lol) to wait until Monday to find out.