Updated: Feb 20, 2020 Published Apr 7, 2010
fakemusician
42 Posts
I work for home health. I have a patient who has a VAD (port-a-cath, lifeport) which was due to be flushed the end of last month. She was in the hospital and it didn't get flushed. I am telling her it's long over due (this would be 7th week) but the family feels like it can go just a little bit longer. I've always been told to flush it every 4 weeks but they said they were told different. How long can these devices go without being flushed? Thanks
raianne
41 Posts
Hi! I'm not a nurse yet but I had a port, and they told me it needed to be flushed every four weeks when I wasn't using it. I think that's the standard.
QUESTION: How often should an implanted port be accessed and flushed?
nersieh
2 Posts
it wouldnt hurt to flush it...last thing you need is a clogged PORT
tewdles, RN
3,156 Posts
Standard of care is flush Q 4wks.
Deviation from that should include MD order for frequency, to cya.
iluvnoodles
39 Posts
flushing a line cant hurt. its just clearing the line from being clogged. you dont want to have to send the patient to hospital to get it changed. educating the family is always good. I mean they didnt go to nursing school. i wouldnt go by them, your the nurse.
IVRUS, BSN, RN
1,049 Posts
fakemusician said:i work for home health. i have a patient who has a VAD (port-a-cath, lifeport) which was due to be flushed the end of last month. she was in the hospital and it didnt' get flushed. i am telling her it's long over due (this would be 7th week) but the family feels like it can go just a little bit longer. i've always been told to flush it every 4 weeks but they said they were told different. how long can these devices go without being flushed? thanks
Standard of practice by Infusion Nurses Society (INS) is flushing every month to maintain patency of the device. What is your agencies policy? It is always important to follow P&P, and hopefully that P&P reflects INS standards.
Can a port be flushed at longer intervals.. Yes, but you must understand the ramifications of this action. You see, after the placement of all IV catheters, fibrin will build up on the catheter's end (may be both internal and external developments) This fibrin build-up is a precurser to bacteria colonizing on the fibrin as well as leading to thrombus formation. Also, biofilm is another concern as flushing a line can lead to its disruption and subsequent "seeding" of the bacteria contained within. So.. if elongated periods pass without flushing a line, one can cause dangerous microbs to enter the blood system in a septic shock fashion.
I always refuse to flush any port which has not been properly maintained after two months have passed.
Does this help?
onc nurse
7 Posts
4 weeks is standard.
dln1x0n
37 Posts
one month is standard
nursetmj
34 Posts
I work in an outpatient Onc clinic; we set our appointments for every 6-8 weeks for routine port flushes. Of course you always have people who forget or just don't want to take the time to come in for it. I think I flushed one a few weeks ago that hadn't been flushed in a year! Not smart. I did get a blood return though :)
nursetmj said:I work in an outpatient Onc clinic; we set our appointments for every 6-8 weeks for routine port flushes. Of course you always have people who forget or just don't want to take the time to come in for it. I think I flushed one a few weeks ago that hadn't been flushed in a year! Not smart. I did get a blood return though ?
"Hadn't been flushed in over a year..." WOW. I surely wouldn't have flushed it. Talk about Septic rush!
imapsychrn
85 Posts
I'm a student and I have a question - what would you do you if you had a patient like the above that went a year or more without getting the port flushed?
I know someone said they wouldn't flush it - so what would you do?
Thanks!
OCNRN63, RN
5,978 Posts
I'd access it and attempt to flush it. We also had someone who hadn't had hers flushed for over a year and it worked like a charm...great blood return.
Our patients usually get theirs flushed every 4-6 weeks.