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"Central venous catheterization is more effective than peripheral venous catheterization in cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Moreover, femoral vein access was more effective than internal jugular vein access" Qin et al (2023).

Impact of vascular access type on cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality

Abstract:

This randomized controlled study aimed to prospectively evaluate the application effects of other venous access in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A total of 212 patients who underwent respiratory and cardiac arrest were randomly divided into peripheral intravenous (IV) access group (IV group, n = 69), femoral vein catheterization group (FVC group, n = 72), and internal jugular vein catheterization group (IJVC group, n = 71). The puncture time, first administration time, pressure interruption time caused by the establishment of fluid pathway, endotracheal intubation time, complications, ROSC time, and ETCO2 were recorded. The time of establishing venous access was: IVIJVC>IV, P = 0.04). There was no significant difference in EtCO2 between the FVC, IV group, and IJVC group (PVC>IJVC>IV, P = 0.17). Due to catheterization, the time of suspending chest compression in the FVC group was significantly lower than in the IJVC group (5s vs. 12s). The time of establishing an artificial airway in the IV (38s) and FVC (35s) group were significantly longer than that in IJVC (52s) group. Central venous catheterization is more effective than peripheral venous catheterization in cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Moreover, femoral vein access was more effective than internal jugular vein access.


Reference:

Qin H, Wang L, Yu B, Xing D, Su J, Bai Z. Effect of other venous access on cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality: A prospective, randomized, controlled trial. Biotechnol Genet Eng Rev. 2023 Apr 17:1-11. doi: 10.1080/02648725.2023.2199239. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 37066803.