Adjacent central venous catheters can result in immediate aspiration of infused drugs during renal replacement therapy.

Link to article at PubMed

Adjacent central venous catheters can result in immediate aspiration of infused drugs during renal replacement therapy.

Anaesthesia. 2012 Feb;67(2):115-21

Authors: Kam KY, Mari JM, Wigmore TJ

Abstract
Dual-lumen haemodiafiltration catheters enable continuous renal replacement therapy in the critically ill and are often co-located with central venous catheters used to infuse drugs. The extent to which infusions are immediately aspirated by an adjacent haemodiafiltration catheter remains unknown. A bench model was constructed to evaluate this effect. A central venous catheter and a haemodiafiltration catheter were inserted into a simulated central vein and flow generated using centrifugal pumps within the simulated vein and haemodiafiltration circuit. Ink was used as a visual tracer and creatinine solution as a quantifiable tracer. Tracers were completely aspirated by the haemodiafiltration catheter unless the infusion was at least 1 cm downstream to the arterial port. No tracer was aspirated from catheters infusing at least 2 cm downstream. Orientation of side ports did not affect tracer elimination. Co-location of central venous and haemodiafiltration catheters may lead to complete aspiration of infusions into the haemodiafilter with resultant drug under-dosing.

PMID: 22059378 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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