Prospective, randomized controlled comparison of a flash-tip catheter and a traditional intravenous catheter in an urban emergency department

Author:

Moayedi Siamak12,Witting Michael1,Hirshon Jon Mark13,George Nicholas1,Burke Alise1,Schenkel Stephen12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Mercy Medical Center, Baltimore, MD, USA

3. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

Introduction: Safe and efficient intravenous access is paramount to the practice of emergency medicine. We compared the first-stick success rates and blood spillage of two peripheral intravenous catheters in a busy urban emergency department. Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, we assigned emergency department patients requiring peripheral intravenous access to use of either a flash-tip catheter (SurFlash Plus, Terumo Medical Corporation, Somerset, New Jersey) or a widely used control catheter (Insyte Autoguard; Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey). We compared frequency of first-stick success and blood contamination between catheters using chi-squared analysis. Results: We enrolled 600 patients, randomizing 309 to the flash-tip catheter and 291 to the control catheter. The first-stick success rate of each device was 79%. Blood contamination, defined as spillage of blood on the patient’s skin, bedding, or the inserter, occurred in 8 of 309 cases (2.6%) with the flash-tip catheter versus 92 of 291 cases (31.6%) for the control catheter. Conclusion: The two catheters tested in this study had comparable rates of first-stick success, but the flash-tip catheter was associated with significantly less blood contamination during insertion attempts.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nephrology,Surgery

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