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we were never permitted to access an infusaport for blood draws with a vacutainer. we used a 5 cc syringe to draw and discard 5 cc of blood, using a huber needle. then, we drew 5 cc of blood gently back into the syringe. after that, we flushed with 5 cc ns, followed by 5 cc whatever dose of heplock solution the physician preferred. we followed the same procedure for central lines, and i have never had a problem, nor seen anyone else having a problem, using this method.
It has always been the accepted practice to use 10 cc syringes on central lines because of the lower psi, however it is now permissable to use a smaller syringe if you know that the catheter is open and not sluggish. New products are always coming out and we are now trying a 3 cc syringe with a 10 c barrel. Syringes with a higher psi could lead to catheter rupture or detatchment of "foriegn objects" from the catheter.
I don't know if there is a policy or not, but I don't think that using vacutainers is a good idea. I've seen it done, but I would avoid it. You don't have any control if you're using a vacutainer. I really don't think there's a problem using a 5 cc syringe to withdraw blood from a port, though. Especially if you withdraw slowly enough and are extremely careful not to collapse the line.
You should never push anything *into* a central line with anything smaller than a 10 cc syringe, for the reasons that pauls-gal said. Pending further research, of course.
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Dennie
micky
6 Posts
does anyones policy allow vacutainer use for blood sampling form portacaths??? if so please e-mail me at [email protected]
THANKS