VeinViewer Assisted Intravenous Catheter Placement in the Pediatric Emergency Department
NCT ID: NCT00468065
Last Updated: 2008-05-07
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
PHASE4
200 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2007-04-30
2008-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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2\. Background Intravenous cannulation is a routine and common part of treatment for children receiving care in the Pediatric Emergency Department. Intravenous cannulation is painful and often challenging in children. Peripheral IV's are generally placed using visual and/or tactile cues. These may be minimal or deceptive in children who often have small peripheral veins and increased subcutaneous fat with opaque, elastic skin. Health care workers often struggle to place these IV's successfully making multiple sticks, infiltrating subcutaneous tissues, requiring extensive operator time, and, most importantly, causing the patient and the parent distress. A number of approaches have been tried, attempting to decrease the pain of these cannulations. Most of these involve the cutaneous application of lidocaine in an attempt to numb the skin and decrease the pain of the stick.
EMLA and more recently, LMX (lidocaine in liposomal delivery system) are effective topical agents but there is a 30 minute dwell time - inappropriate in the Emergency Medicine setting. A number of devices have been tested which decrease the barrier of the stratum corneum thus allowing the lidocaine to anesthetize the skin in 3-5 minutes. These include a hand held laser (effective but burns and pigments the skin), a small ultrasound (effective but bulky and difficult to use), and gas pressure driven powdered lidocaine (effective but not approved by the FDA yet for general sales and distribution). These devices depend on identifying the vein and then successfully cannulating the identified vein through the anestethized skin. Missed sticks force the operator to begin the anesthesia process all over again in a different site. This process is time consuming and ineffective in the ED setting.
Other centers have begun to employ ultrasound to identify the veins for peripheral cannulation to cannulate under indirect visualization. This process is difficult for small mobile pediatric veins and requires extensive operator training and practice. It also requires an extra set of operator hands when children, often less than cooperative, are involved. It is unclear that this approach will be effective in the Pediatric ED.
Vein Viewerâ is a hands off device that projects a map of the subcutaneous veins onto the surface of the skin. It allows the operator to insert the IV catheter under direct visualization. It can be used by one operator who can insert the catheter and restrain the child's arm while using the device. Direct visualization is accurate and decreases the blind sticks, missed "fishing expeditions", and extravasations of IV fluid and medication (often not benign) that can occur with IV cannulation, especially in children. Decreasing the number of sticks and the time to successful catheterization will decrease the child's and the parents perceived pain of the procedure and the operator time to effective catheterization thus increasing the efficiency of the operator and the ED in general, and speeding the initiation of therapy (IV hydration or medication). The Vein Viewer has no side effects and is visually interesting to children and parents. It has the potential to revolutionize the effectiveness and efficiency, of IV cannulation in the Pediatric Emergency Department and decrease substantially the child's and the parent's perceived pain from the procedure and fear of the procedure.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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A
TO use Veinviewer to improve the effectiveness of IV starts in children
VeinViewer
Veinveiwer is used to view veins subQ
Veinviewer
near infrared light reveals veins subcutaneously
B
Standard approach to placing IV s in children
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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VeinViewer
Veinveiwer is used to view veins subQ
Veinviewer
near infrared light reveals veins subcutaneously
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Both the child and the parent/guardian must be English-speaking
* Both the child and the parent/guardian must be comfortable with the experimental protocol as explained to them by the study investigator or a research assistant
* The parent/guardian must be able to understand and sign informed consent and a HIPAA form
* The child must provide assent
* The child must demonstrate understanding of the 100mm standard Visual Analog Scale
Exclusion Criteria
* Need for an emergent IV
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Lifespan
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Lifespan
Principal Investigators
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Bruce M Becker
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Lifespan
Locations
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Hasbro Children's Hospital
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Bruce M Becker, MD
Role: primary
References
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Chapman LL, Sullivan B, Pacheco AL, Draleau CP, Becker BM. VeinViewer-assisted Intravenous catheter placement in a pediatric emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2011 Sep;18(9):966-71. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2011.01155.x. Epub 2011 Aug 19.
Other Identifiers
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0037-07
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id