1. Umbilical venous catheterisation: emergency central venous access which saves lives in coarctation of the aorta
- Author
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Gerry Hughes, Nele Legge, Amber Seigel, and Kathryn Browning Carmo
- Subjects
Male ,Resuscitation ,Umbilical Veins ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coarctation of the aorta ,Aortic Coarctation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ductus arteriosus ,Catheterization, Peripheral ,medicine ,Intubation ,Humans ,Prostaglandin E1 ,Infusions, Intravenous ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Infusions, Intraosseous ,Venous access ,Catheter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Heart failure ,business - Abstract
We describe a 9-day-old baby with coarctation of the aorta who required urgent resuscitation including intubation and cardiac compressions. Despite the commencement of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) to reopen the ductus arteriosus via the intraosseous route, postductal saturations remained unrecordable for a further 45 min. Within 3 min of administration of PGE1 via an umbilical venous catheter (UVC), saturations were recordable at 92%. UVC access was the sentinel intervention that irrevocably altered the clinical prognosis. This baby boy has survived with excellent neurodevelopmental outcome. Clinicians are less familiar with UVCs outside of the newborn period. Our data demonstrate successful placement in neonates up to 28 days of age. We hope this case encourages clinicians to consider the UVC as first-line central venous access in collapsed neonates. In cases of suspected left heart obstruction, we argue that UVCs are the optimal route.
- Published
- 2023