• Am J Emerg Med · May 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study

    Ultrasound guidance for radial arterial puncture: a randomized controlled trial.

    • Xavier Bobbia, Romain Genre Grandpierre, Pierre-Géraud Claret, Alexandre Moreau, Stéphane Pommet, Jean-Marie Bonnec, Rémi Perrin Bayard, Jean-Yves Lefrant, Laurent Muller, and Jean-Emmanuel de La Coussaye.
    • Division Anesthésie Réanimation Douleur Urgences, GHU Carémeau, Place du Professeur Robert Debré, CHU Nîmes, 30 029 Nîmes Cedex 9, France.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2013 May 1; 31 (5): 810-5.

    UnlabelledSTUDY OBJECTIVE AND BACKGROUND: Arterial puncture for blood gas analysis is a frequent procedure and could be difficult in the emergency setting. The aim of the study was to compare ultrasonographically guided arterial radial puncture vs conventional sampling.Materials And MethodsThis is a prospective, randomized study. The inclusion criteria are all patients needing arterial blood gas at admission in the emergency unit. The exclusion criteria are the following: Hallen test positive, local sepsis, local trauma, known sever local arteriopathy, refusal of consent by the patient, participation in another study, and cardiac arrest. Patients were randomized into 2 groups: radial arterial puncture obtained through an ultrasonographically guided technique (group 1) or radial arterial puncture by conventional method (group 2). The main objective is the number of attempts after enrollment. The secondary objectives are time to success, patient satisfaction and pain, and physician satisfaction. Immediate complications were collected. Groups were compared with nonparametric analysis.ResultsThe data were usable for 72 of 74 patients included. Lung disease (acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pneumonia) at 45% (n = 32) and suspicion of pulmonary embolism in 31% (n = 22) were the most common reasons. Demographics data were comparable in the 2 groups. In group 1, the number of attempts significantly increased (2.35 [1-3] vs 1.66 [1-2] [P = .017]), and the sample was 2.4 times longer (132 seconds [50-200] vs 55 [20-65] [P < .01] by standard method). There was no significant difference in terms of pain (visual analog scale [VAS], 3.6 [2-5] for both groups [P = .743]), patient satisfaction (VAS, 7.2 [5-9] vs 6.8 [5-9] [P = .494]), and physician satisfaction (VAS, 6.0 [3.5-8] vs 6.9 [5-9] [P = .233]). No immediate complications were found in the 2 groups.ConclusionUltrasonographically guided arterial puncture increases the number and duration of implementations. This technique, however, does not alter the patient's pain, the number of immediate complications, or patient and physician satisfaction.Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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