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Death by Arterial Line?



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  #1  
Old Aug 11, 2006, 07:30 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Death by Arterial Line?

I was told when I was being precepted to NEVER silence the alarm on my arterial lines, no matter what, because if the line was to disconnect the patient could literally bleed to death through the line without any notice. Well, that scared me half to death so I have faithfully followed that advice.

I had a patient today who had an arterial line placed (on a previous shift) for lab draws because she was a "difficult stick." Well, It drew blood beautifully. However: 1) I could not get an accurate reading for the life of me (pitiful waveform) and neither could other nurses who tried 2) it alarmed constantly 3) she didn't require frequent labs 4) she wasn't a difficult stick!

But the night shift nurse who I gave report to was clearly frustrated with me for pulling it. She said I should have simply kept it all connected but taken it off the monitor entirely, for blood drawing purposes. Am I missing something here? She has about 8 years more experience than I do.

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  #2  
Old Aug 11, 2006, 11:30 PM
EricEnfermero's Avatar
EricEnfermero (Male)
Call me Eric
Join Date: Nov 2005
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

I'm still a rookie (and a NICU nurse, not a CCU nurse - sorry for the intrusion) but I would be big time nervous if I left a line in a patient's artery with no monitoring/alarms. So I'm with you.

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  #3  
Old Aug 12, 2006, 12:13 AM
cardiacRN2006's Avatar
I'm hungry...
Join Date: Jan 2005
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

If we're not using it, then I want it out. Not just because it's uncomfortable and the the pt may bleed from it, but because it's another place for an infection to develop. Not to mention I have to document it's existance every two hours with each assessment. I'm all about de-lining people!

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  #4  
Old Aug 12, 2006, 01:59 AM
Gompers's Avatar
New Mommy!
Join Date: Nov 2003
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

I would have wanted it out, too. If there isn't a good wave form with it, that makes me wonder how well it's positioned and I'd fear that it would cause circulation issues at some point. When we have a line like that in the NICU, first we'll try retaping and repositioning it. If that doesn't work, then we have the docs pull it. It's too much of a risk to leave a "bad" line in, even if it does draw blood okay.

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  #5  
Old Aug 12, 2006, 09:35 AM
ZASHAGALKA's Avatar
ZASHAGALKA (Male)
Who's John Galt
Join Date: May 2005
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

If you turn the alarms OFF, then a patient CAN bleed to death, because you have turned off the 'disconnect' alarm.

My first Nurse Manager considered an off art line alarm to be a 'final warning' reprimand.

But, you CAN widen the parameters so that the line doesn't 'alarm' for being dampened. For example, instead of setting the parameters at 90/160 for systolic, you can set it as 40/300.

This prevents the art line from constantly alarming because it is out of range, but leaves the 'disconnect' alarm on and intact. And then THAT allows the line to be used for serial abg/lab collection.

But I completely disagree with taking an art line 'off the monitor entirely'.

~faith,
Timothy.


Last edited by ZASHAGALKA : Aug 12, 2006 at 09:40 AM.
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  #6  
Old Aug 12, 2006, 09:37 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

I agree with the other posters-pull it! If they really need something for frequent lab draws, then you're probably giving a lot of meds. How about a PICC line? Placing one of those makes much more sense-more comfortable for the pt, lasts much longer, good for giving meds and drawing blood. Costs are about the same as 4-6 regular IV sticks; and a nurse can place one at the bedside!

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  #7  
Old Aug 12, 2006, 09:54 PM
chaosRN's Avatar
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

Originally Posted by ZASHAGALKA
If you turn the alarms OFF, then a patient CAN bleed to death, because you have turned off the 'disconnect' alarm.

My first Nurse Manager considered an off art line alarm to be a 'final warning' reprimand.

But, you CAN widen the parameters so that the line doesn't 'alarm' for being dampened. For example, instead of setting the parameters at 90/160 for systolic, you can set it as 40/300.

This prevents the art line from constantly alarming because it is out of range, but leaves the 'disconnect' alarm on and intact. And then THAT allows the line to be used for serial abg/lab collection.

But I completely disagree with taking an art line 'off the monitor entirely'.

~faith,
Timothy.


we do this exactly.

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  #8  
Old Aug 13, 2006, 11:36 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

Had this exact situation at work happen a while back. Pts aline was off the monitor, but left in for lab draws. Nurse goes in the check on sleeping pt, notices something on the floor, looks down there is blood all over the floor. Long story short, the aline ended up unconnected, stat h/h checked, pt got 2 units of blood. We were told to not do this either, b/c it is totally a patient safety issue. If you don't need the aline for continuous bp monitoring of vasoactive meds, or a sick pt on the vent for frequeny lab draws/abgs, I agree with the other posters. Why keep an invasive line you don't need and put patient at risk for numerous complications, especially if is not reading right and the patient is not a hard stick so getting labs won't be an issue? I wouldn't feel bad about it. Ultimately, pulling it is not going to do patient any harm in this situation, whereas leaving it in with the monitor of very well could cause patient harm.

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  #9  
Old Aug 14, 2006, 04:45 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

I would never leave a line in that isn't monitored...I'm with others who have posted-turn your alarms limits down, not off. If the patient had no other access I would have left it in, especially if it was a patient with a respiratory problem and we were checking ABG's. But I'd never leave in a line that I wasn't monitoring, even if it was incorrect.
Not to get all administrative......but, It is a National Patient Safety Goal to be able to hear the alarms at any place in the unit. Obviously a well founded goal.

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  #10  
Old Aug 17, 2006, 08:53 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2003
Re: Death by Arterial Line?

My first question is why on earth would you place an A-line simply for blood draws? You can't give meds through it and if you're not interested in obtaining blood gasses then it simply is the wrong choice. As far as what to do with it... I would widen the parameters assuming it had some sort of waveform. This way you solve the alarm issue, unless it becomes disconnected, in which case it should alarm. I would not have just pulled it without consulting with a midlevel. The line could be improved upon by using a longer cath placed over a wire.

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