• J Vasc Interv Radiol · Sep 2009

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Facilitation of radial artery cannulation by periradial subcutaneous administration of nitroglycerin.

    • Basar Candemir, Deniz Kumbasar, Sibel Turhan, Mustafa Kilickap, Cagdas Ozdol, Omer Akyurek, Yusuf Atmaca, and Timucin Altin.
    • Department of Cardiology, Ankara University School of Medicine, Ibni Sina Hospital, Ankara 06460, Turkey. Basarcandemir@yahoo.com
    • J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2009 Sep 1; 20 (9): 1151-6.

    PurposeTo determine whether subcutaneous administration of nitroglycerin mixed with local anesthetic agent results in effective vasodilation of the radial artery, and whether this technique improves access time and decreases complications.Materials And MethodsThis prospective study consisted of two consecutive investigations. In the first (n = 30), only local anesthetic agent (prilocaine 2%) was injected into one arm, and local anesthetic agent plus 500 microg nitroglycerin was injected into the other arm. Radial artery diameters before and after injections were measured by ultrasonography. In the second, 33 patients received local anesthetic agent (prilocaine 2%) plus 500 microg nitroglycerin (group A) and 30 received only local anesthetic agent (group B) to determine whether the addition of nitroglycerin would improve radial artery access time, duration of angiography, perception of arterial pulse (ie, pulse score), number of punctures before successful cannulation, and complication rates.ResultsIn the first investigation, radial artery diameter increased significantly in the nitroglycerin-treated arm (2.3 mm +/- 0.4 vs 2.9 mm +/- 0.5; P = .05). In the second, there were no significant differences between groups with respect to age, sex, duration of angiography, and number of punctures before cannulation. However, the pulse score increased and radial artery access time improved significantly after addition of nitroglycerin (79% vs 10% [P < .001] and 75 sec +/- 47 vs 132 sec +/- 100 [P = .005], respectively). Radial artery spasm and thrombosis were less frequently observed in group A, albeit to an insignificant extent (P = .39 and P = .49, respectively).ConclusionsSubcutaneous administration of nitroglycerin significantly increased radial artery diameter, which can lead to facilitation of catheterization of the radial artery for arteriography and interventions.

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