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ID 119596
Author
Endo, Hiroya Tokushima University
Sekiguchi, Ryo Tokushima University
Keywords
Catheterization, Peripheral
Flow-Mediated Dilation
Vascular Access Devices
Vasodilation
Veins
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Background: Venodilation is crucial in enhancing the success rate of peripheral intravenous cannulation. Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) is a vasodilatory response initiated by temporary ischemia followed by reperfusion. This crossover study aimed to test the hypothesis that FMD induces dilation of the peripheral veins of the forearm.
Methods: Fifteen healthy volunteers underwent the FMD and control conditions in a randomized order. FMD involved a 5-minute occlusion of blood flow in the brachial artery, followed by reperfusion, achieved by inflating and deflating a cuff placed on the upper arm. The control condition involved participants remaining at rest. The primary outcome measure was a change in the cross-sectional area of the cephalic vein post-intervention. The secondary outcomes included changes in venous diameter and perfusion index (PI).
Results: FMD significantly increased the cross-sectional area of the cephalic vein compared with the control condition (relative change to baseline: 37.7% [31.4] vs 2.2% [11.7]), with a mean difference of 35.4% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 16.4 to 54.5, P=.001). Both longitudinal and transverse diameters were significantly expanded with FMD compared to the control (relative change to baseline: 15.7% [15.4] vs 2.6% [3.6], P=.004; 18.9% [15.6] vs −0.0 [10.2], P=.003, respectively). Additionally, PI significantly increased with FMD compared with the control (relative change to baseline: 77.8% [56.9] vs 14.6% [36.0]), with a mean difference of 63.2% (95% CI: 31.2 to 95.2, P=.001).
Conclusion: FMD application induced dilation of the cephalic vein of the forearm. The findings suggest that FMD is an effective technique for dilating the venous area and potentially improving the success rate of peripheral intravenous cannulation.
Journal Title
The Journal of Vascular Access
ISSN
11297298
17246032
NCID
AA11699567
AA1287226X
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Published Date
2024-08-22
Rights
H Endo, R Sekiguchi, M Kinoshita, K Tanaka, Peripheral venous dilation using flow-mediated dilation response: A randomized crossover study, The Journal of Vascular Access. Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). DOI: 10.1177/11297298241273642.
EDB ID
DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
FullText File
tjva.pdf 760 KB
language
eng
TextVersion
Author
departments
University Hospital
Medical Sciences