Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care

In canine and feline patients presenting in a state of hemodynamic collapse, obtaining vascular access can be challenging. Delays in achieving vascular access interfere with delivery of patient care. In human medicine, definitions of difficult vascular access are variable and include the need for mu...

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Autores principales: Jack A. Lee, Liz-Valéry S. Guieu, Geneviève Bussières, Christopher K. Smith
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/aedd09c3035241f99bc8942d603233bf
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:aedd09c3035241f99bc8942d603233bf2021-12-01T13:09:23ZAdvanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care2297-176910.3389/fvets.2021.703595https://doaj.org/article/aedd09c3035241f99bc8942d603233bf2021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fvets.2021.703595/fullhttps://doaj.org/toc/2297-1769In canine and feline patients presenting in a state of hemodynamic collapse, obtaining vascular access can be challenging. Delays in achieving vascular access interfere with delivery of patient care. In human medicine, definitions of difficult vascular access are variable and include the need for multiple placement attempts or involvement of specialized teams and equipment. Incidence and risk factors for difficult vascular access have not been well studied in veterinary patients, which limits understanding of how best to address this issue. Alternatives to percutaneous peripheral or central intravenous catheterization in dogs and cats include venous cutdowns, umbilical access in newborns, corpus cavernosum access in males, ultrasound-guided catheterization, and intraosseous catheterization. In recent years, advances in ultrasonography and intraosseous access techniques have made these more accessible to veterinary practitioners. These vascular access techniques are reviewed here, along with advantages, limitations, and areas for future study of each technique.Jack A. LeeLiz-Valéry S. GuieuGeneviève BussièresChristopher K. SmithFrontiers Media S.A.articledifficult vascular accessintraosseouscutdownemergencyveterinaryultrasoundVeterinary medicineSF600-1100ENFrontiers in Veterinary Science, Vol 8 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic difficult vascular access
intraosseous
cutdown
emergency
veterinary
ultrasound
Veterinary medicine
SF600-1100
spellingShingle difficult vascular access
intraosseous
cutdown
emergency
veterinary
ultrasound
Veterinary medicine
SF600-1100
Jack A. Lee
Liz-Valéry S. Guieu
Geneviève Bussières
Christopher K. Smith
Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
description In canine and feline patients presenting in a state of hemodynamic collapse, obtaining vascular access can be challenging. Delays in achieving vascular access interfere with delivery of patient care. In human medicine, definitions of difficult vascular access are variable and include the need for multiple placement attempts or involvement of specialized teams and equipment. Incidence and risk factors for difficult vascular access have not been well studied in veterinary patients, which limits understanding of how best to address this issue. Alternatives to percutaneous peripheral or central intravenous catheterization in dogs and cats include venous cutdowns, umbilical access in newborns, corpus cavernosum access in males, ultrasound-guided catheterization, and intraosseous catheterization. In recent years, advances in ultrasonography and intraosseous access techniques have made these more accessible to veterinary practitioners. These vascular access techniques are reviewed here, along with advantages, limitations, and areas for future study of each technique.
format article
author Jack A. Lee
Liz-Valéry S. Guieu
Geneviève Bussières
Christopher K. Smith
author_facet Jack A. Lee
Liz-Valéry S. Guieu
Geneviève Bussières
Christopher K. Smith
author_sort Jack A. Lee
title Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
title_short Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
title_full Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
title_fullStr Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
title_full_unstemmed Advanced Vascular Access in Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care
title_sort advanced vascular access in small animal emergency and critical care
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/aedd09c3035241f99bc8942d603233bf
work_keys_str_mv AT jackalee advancedvascularaccessinsmallanimalemergencyandcriticalcare
AT lizvalerysguieu advancedvascularaccessinsmallanimalemergencyandcriticalcare
AT genevievebussieres advancedvascularaccessinsmallanimalemergencyandcriticalcare
AT christopherksmith advancedvascularaccessinsmallanimalemergencyandcriticalcare
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