I looked back and couldn’t find a post about this topic in the last year or so but forgive me if it has already been posted. I have been following R.E.B.E.L. EM for a few months now and I would recommend it to everyone who has the time and wants quick summaries on the latest EM literature. They have short written summaries of papers including pros/cons of the study and what they feel are the most important take away points. It was founded by Salim Rezaie with Rob Rogers, Matt Astin and Anand Swaminatham serving as editors.
Occasionally they will have a “mythbuster” post looking at common myths in the ED and the most uptodate literature available on the topic. (their latest mythbust is on “safe” glucose levels before ED discharge but I digress)
Back in May they reviewed the safety of vasopressors through a PIV. The topic paper was titled “A systematic review of extravasation and local tissue injury from administration of vasopressors through peripheral intravenous catheters and central venous catheters”
What the review found was very interesting: of 318 events, 204 results in local tissue damage, 114 were only extravasation events and 7 events involved the use of a CVC (so clearly not completely safe). Interesting, of the 204 local tissue events 85.3% involved PIV distal to the antecubital fossa and 96.8% involved administration of >4hrs.
REBEL EM’s take away points were:
In critically ill patients, with hemodynamic instability, vasopressor infusion through a proximal PIV (antecubital fossa or external jugular vein), for <4hours of duration is unlikely to result in tissue injury and will reduce the time it takes to achieve hemodynamic stability.
What I feel like this means for us is simple: If you have a crashing, hypotensive patient who needs a pressor without a CVC but good proximal PIVs, start the pressor immediately, stabilize the patient as best you can, then take the time to properly place a CVC.
Continue to monitor the PIV until it can be switch to the CVC and stop the pressor immediately if there is any suspicion for local extravasation. I am sure this will make some people nervous but I think this is better then placing a “crash line” that is less then sterile which will expose an already ill patient to infection or other complications secondary to a hastily placed CVC.
I highly recommend read their review and how they came to this conclusion along with their other posts. I have included the link to this study at the bottom.
http://rebelem.com/mythbuster-administration-of-vasopressors-through-peripheral-intravenous-access/