2014
DOI: 10.1002/phar.1396
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Management of Extravasation Injuries: A Focused Evaluation of Noncytotoxic Medications

Abstract: Extravasations are common manifestations of iatrogenic injury that occur in patients requiring intravenous delivery of known vesicants. These injuries can contribute substantially to patient morbidity, cost of therapy, and length of stay. Many different mechanisms are behind the tissue damage during extravasation injuries. In general, extravasations consist of four different subtypes of tissue injury: vasoconstriction, osmotic, pH related, and cytotoxic. Recognition of high-risk patients, appropriate cannulati… Show more

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Cited by 130 publications
(217 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, we consider it safe to be conservative in treatment of extravasation of these tracers. Attention should only be focused on early complications of the extravasation that are not attributable to the radioactivity, such as skin necrosis and compartment syndrome [65, 66]. Other diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals were reported to cause at least mild skin lesions, notably 201 Th-thallous chloride and 131 I-iodine-iodocholesterol.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, we consider it safe to be conservative in treatment of extravasation of these tracers. Attention should only be focused on early complications of the extravasation that are not attributable to the radioactivity, such as skin necrosis and compartment syndrome [65, 66]. Other diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals were reported to cause at least mild skin lesions, notably 201 Th-thallous chloride and 131 I-iodine-iodocholesterol.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only few were applied in reported cases. Dispersive actions can be effective in extravasation non-radiopharmaceutic agents [65, 66]. It can be debated if all listed dispersive interventions can be applied to radiopharmaceuticals.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Prompt recognition of extravasation and initiation of the reversal agents were vital in the prevention of long-term complications. [14,23] The nursing and medical teams were educated on the protocol prior to its initiation, with emphasis on strict adherence to ensure patient safety.…”
Section: Medicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In these guidelines, cytotoxic agents are classified into three categories according to the severity of skin injury after extravasation: vesicants, irritants, and non-tissue-damaging agents. [1][2][3] Vesicants are agents that cause tissue necrosis even at small volumes of extravasation owing to their inherent toxicity to cells. Irritants cause inflammation without necrosis at the extravasation site.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%