2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.arcped.2008.06.023
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Le cathétérisme veineux ombilical et épicutanéocave chez le nouveau-né

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…[27] Bouissou et al stated that their NICU preferred silicone catheters unless insertion did not go well, or the patient weighed less than 800g. [40] Hereby, we simply conclude the difference between polyurethane and silicone catheters from Enrico in Peripherally Inserted Central venous catheters: Silicone catheters are softer and more flexible, can bend and recover more efficiently, and are not permanently deformed as easily as polyurethane catheters. Silicone catheters are less prone to stress cracking, and more resistant to attack by common antiseptic and cleaning preparations than polyurethane catheters because it is cross-linked.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…[27] Bouissou et al stated that their NICU preferred silicone catheters unless insertion did not go well, or the patient weighed less than 800g. [40] Hereby, we simply conclude the difference between polyurethane and silicone catheters from Enrico in Peripherally Inserted Central venous catheters: Silicone catheters are softer and more flexible, can bend and recover more efficiently, and are not permanently deformed as easily as polyurethane catheters. Silicone catheters are less prone to stress cracking, and more resistant to attack by common antiseptic and cleaning preparations than polyurethane catheters because it is cross-linked.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…[27] Bouissou et al stated that their NICU preferred silicone catheters unless insertion did not go well, or the patient weighed less than 800g. [40]…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%