1997
DOI: 10.1016/s1051-0443(97)70586-4
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Migration of Central Venous Catheters: Implications for Initial Catheter Tip Positioning

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Cited by 108 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Even with fluoroscopic guidance, tip location may not always be perfect. Catheter position is dynamic; the catheter tip often migrates several centimeters cephalad when patients move from a supine to an upright position [21,22]. In women with chest ports or tunneled catheters, downward retraction due to breast tissue may exaggerate cephalad migration of catheter tips (Fig.…”
Section: Ideal Catheter Positionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even with fluoroscopic guidance, tip location may not always be perfect. Catheter position is dynamic; the catheter tip often migrates several centimeters cephalad when patients move from a supine to an upright position [21,22]. In women with chest ports or tunneled catheters, downward retraction due to breast tissue may exaggerate cephalad migration of catheter tips (Fig.…”
Section: Ideal Catheter Positionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…-плевральний -для аспірації плевральної рідини і введення хіміопрепаратів; -епідуральний/спінальний -для введення знеболювальних препаратів при больовому синдромі [3,4,5].…”
Section: рис 5 зовнішній вигляд інфузійного портаunclassified
“…The location of the catheter tip within the blood vessels also is important. If the tip is above T3 or in the right atrium, the patient may be at greater risk of thrombosis, although this may not be true for neonatal umbilical artery catheters [44][45][46][47][48]. Several reports suggest that catheters in the femoral and subclavian veins are more likely to be associated with thrombosis than those that are inserted into the jugular veins; however, there is conflicting information about thrombotic predisposition and laterality of insertion.…”
Section: What We Do Not Know About Catheter-related Deep Venous Thrommentioning
confidence: 99%