2,691 results on '"Infusion pumps"'
Search Results
2. Cannabidiol reduces withdrawal symptoms in nicotine-dependent rats
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Smith, Lauren C, Tieu, Lani, Suhandynata, Raymond T, Boomhower, Brent, Hoffman, Melissa, Sepulveda, Yadira, Carrette, Lieselot LG, Momper, Jeremiah D, Fitzgerald, Robert L, Hanham, Kate, Dowling, Joseph, Kallupi, Marsida, and George, Olivier
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Brain Disorders ,Cannabinoid Research ,Tobacco ,Substance Misuse ,Cannabidiol Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Anticonvulsants ,Cannabidiol ,Female ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Nicotine ,Rats ,Rats ,Wistar ,Substance Withdrawal Syndrome ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,CBD ,Addiction ,Treatment ,Abstinence ,Withdrawal ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biological psychology - Abstract
RationaleCannabidiol (CBD) reduces craving in animal models of alcohol and cocaine use and is known to modulate nicotinic receptor function, suggesting that it may alleviate symptoms of nicotine withdrawal. However, preclinical evaluation of its efficacy is still lacking.ObjectivesThe goal of this study was to test the preclinical efficacy of a chronic CBD treatment in reducing nicotine dependence using measures of withdrawal symptoms including somatic signs, hyperalgesia, and weight gain during acute and protracted abstinence.MethodsMale and female Wistar rats were made dependent on nicotine using osmotic minipumps (3.15 mg/kg/day) for 2 weeks, after which minipumps were removed to induce spontaneous withdrawal. Three groups received CBD injections at doses of 7.5, 15, and 30 mg/kg/day for 2 weeks, starting 1 week into chronic nicotine infusion. The control groups included rats with nicotine minipumps that received vehicle injections of sesame oil instead of CBD; rats implanted with saline minipumps received sesame oil injections (double vehicle) or the highest dose of CBD 30 mg/kg/day. Throughout the experiment, serum was collected for determination of CBD and nicotine concentrations, mechanical sensitivity threshold and withdrawal scores were measured, and body weight was recorded.ResultsCBD prevented rats from exhibiting somatic signs of withdrawal and hyperalgesia during acute and protracted abstinence. There was no dose-response observed for CBD, suggesting a ceiling effect at the doses used and the potential for lower effective doses of CBD. The saline minipump group did not show either somatic signs of withdrawal or hyperalgesia during acute and protracted abstinence, and the highest dose of CBD used (30 mg/kg/day) did not alter these results.ConclusionsThis preclinical study suggests that using CBD as a strategy to alleviate the withdrawal symptoms upon nicotine cessation may be beneficial.
- Published
- 2021
3. Digital droplet infusion
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Fang, Zecong, Li, Andrew I, Liu, Hong, and Pan, Tingrui
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Fluid Mechanics and Thermal Engineering ,Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Biotechnology ,Good Health and Well Being ,Electrodes ,Infusion Pumps ,Microfluidic Analytical Techniques ,Chemical Sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
Infusion pumps have been widely used in clinical settings for the administration of medications and fluids. We present the digital droplet infusion (DDI) device, a low-cost, high-precision digital infusion system, utilizing a microfluidic discretization unit to convert continuous flow into precisely delivered droplet aliquots and a valving unit to control the duration and frequency of flow discretization. The DDI device relies on a distinct capillarity-dominated process of coalescence and pinch-off of droplets for flow digitization, which is monitored by a pair of conductive electrodes located before and after the junction. The digital feedback-controlled flow rate can be employed to adjust a solenoid valve for refined infusion management. With this unique digital microfluidic approach, the DDI technology enables a simple yet powerful infusion system with an ultrahigh resolution of digital droplet transfer volume, as small as 57 nL, which is three orders of magnitude lower than that of clinical standard infusion pumps, as well as a wide range of digitally adjustable infusion rates ranging from 0.1 mL h-1 to 10 mL h-1, in addition to an array of programmable infusion profiles and safety features. Its modular design enables fast assembly using only off-the-shelf and 3D-printed components. Overall, benefiting from its simple device architecture and excellent infusion performance, the DDI technology has great potential to become the next-generation clinical standard for drug delivery with its high precision and ultimate portability at a low cost.
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- 2021
4. Automated Boluses and Delayed-Start Timers Prolong Perineural Local Anesthetic Infusions and Analgesia Following Ankle and Wrist Orthopedic Surgery: A Case-Control Series
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Finneran, John J, Baskin, Paola, Kent, William T, Hentzen, Eric R, Schwartz, Alexandra K, and Ilfeld, Brian M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Neurodegenerative ,Pain Research ,Adult ,Analgesia ,Analgesia ,Patient-Controlled ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Ankle ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Block ,Orthopedic Procedures ,Pain Management ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Ropivacaine ,Wrist ,Acute Pain ,Ultrasonography ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General Clinical Medicine ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND Continuous peripheral nerve blocks can be administered as continuous infusion, patient-controlled boluses, automated boluses, or a combination of these modalities. MATERIAL AND METHODS Ten patients undergoing either ankle (5) or distal radius (5) open reduction and internal fixation received single-injection ropivacaine sciatic nerve block or infraclavicular brachial plexus block and catheter. Infusion pumps were set to begin administering additional ropivacaine 6 h following the initial block as automated boluses supplemented with patient-controlled boluses. RESULTS Patients had similar pain scores when compared to previously published controls; however, local anesthetic consumption was lower in the patients, resulting in increased infusion and analgesia duration by 1 or more days in each group. CONCLUSIONS For infraclavicular and popliteal sciatic catheters, automated boluses may provide a longer duration of analgesia than continuous infusions following painful hand and ankle surgeries, respectively.
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- 2021
5. Does carrier fluid reduce low flow drug infusion error from syringe size?
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Madson, Zachary C, Vangala, Sitaram, Sund, Grace T, and Lin, James A
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Clinical Research ,Infusion pumps ,Intensive care ,Neonatal ,Nursing research ,Patient safety ,Spectrophotometry ,Syringes - Abstract
BackgroundCritically ill neonates and pediatric patients commonly require multiple low flow infusions. Volume limitations are imposed by small body habitus and co-morbidities like cardiopulmonary disease, renal failure, or fluid overload. Vascular access is limited by diminutive veins. Maintenance fluids or parenteral nutrition in conjunction with actively titrated infusions such as insulin, fentanyl, prostaglandins, inotropes and vasopressors may necessitate simultaneous infusions using a single lumen to maintain vascular catheter patency. This requirement for multiple titratable infusions requires concentrated medications at low flows, rather than more dilute drugs at higher flows that in combination may volume overload small infants.AimTo determine whether carrier fluid reduces variability that variability of low flow drug infusions is proportional to syringe size in pediatric critical care.MethodsWe assessed concentrations of orange "drug" in a 0.2 mL/h low flow clinical model with blue dyed carrier fluid at 5 mL/h, using 3-, 10-, or 60-mL syringes. A graduated volumetric pipette was used to measure total flow. Mean time to target concentration was 30, 21, and 46 min in 3-, 10-, and 60-mL syringes, respectively (P = 0.42). After achieving target concentration, more dilute drug was delivered by 60-mL (P < 0.001) and 10-mL syringes (P = 0.04) compared to 3-mL syringes. Drug overdoses were observed during the initial 45 min of infusion in 10-and 60-mL syringes. Total volumes infused after target concentration were less in the 60-mL condition compared to 3-mL (P < 0.01) and 10-mL (P < 0.001) syringes.ResultsLinear mixed effects models demonstrated lesser delivered drug concentrations in the initial 30 min by 3-mL compared to 10-and 60-mL syringes (P = 0.005 and P < 0.001, respectively) but greater drug concentrations and total infused drug in the subsequent 30-60 and 60-90 min intervals with the 3- and 10-mL compared to 60-mL syringes.ConclusionWith carrier fluid, larger syringes were associated with significantly less drug delivery, less total volume delivered, and other flow problems in our low flow drug model. Carrier fluid should not be used to compensate for inappropriately large syringes in critical low flow drug infusions.
- Published
- 2020
6. Time spent outside of target glucose range for young children with type 1 diabetes: a continuous glucose monitor study
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DiMeglio, LA, Kanapka, LG, DeSalvo, DJ, Anderson, BJ, Harrington, KR, Hilliard, ME, Laffel, LM, Tamborlane, WV, Van Name, MA, Wadwa, RP, Willi, SM, Woerner, S, Wong, JC, Miller, KM, and Group, for the SENCE Study
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Pediatric ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Blood Glucose ,Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Glycemic Control ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Insulin ,Insulin Infusion Systems ,Male ,Monitoring ,Ambulatory ,SENCE Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
AimTo assess the associations between demographic and clinical characteristics and sensor glucose metrics in young children with type 1 diabetes, using masked, continuous glucose monitoring data from children aged 2 to < 8 years.Research design and methodsThe analysis included 143 children across 14 sites in the USA, enrolled in a separate clinical trial. Eligibility criteria were: age 2 to 10.0 mmol/l) and a median of ~1 h/day in hypoglycaemia (
- Published
- 2020
7. Precision and reliability study of hospital infusion pumps: a systematic review
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Mayla dos S. Silva, Joabe Lima Araújo, Gustavo A. M. de A. Nunes, Mário Fabrício F. Rosa, Glécia V. da Silva Luz, Suélia de S. R. F. Rosa, and Antônio Piratelli-Filho
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Infusion pumps ,Precision ,Reliability ,Medical equipment ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Infusion Pumps (IP) are medical devices that were developed in the 1960s and generate fluid flow at pressures higher than that of normal blood pressure. Various hospital sectors make use of them, and they have become indispensable in therapies requiring continuity and precision in the administration of medication and/or food. As they are classified Class III (high risk) equipment, their maintenance is crucial for proper performance of the device, as well as patient and operator safety. The principal consideration of the pump is the volume infused, and the device demands great attention to detail when being calibrated. A lack of necessary care with this equipment can lead to uncertainty in volume and precision during the administration of substances. Because of this, it is essential to evaluate its reliability, to prevent possible failures at time of execution. This control aims at the quality of the intended infusion result, becoming an indication of quality. Methods This systematic review summarizes studies done over the last 10 years (2011 to December 2021) that address the reliability and accuracy of hospital infusion pumps, in order to identify planning of maintenance and/or other techniques used in management of the equipment. The Prisma method was applied and the databases utilized were Embase, MEDLINE/Pubmed, Web of Science, Scopus, IEEE Xplore, and Science Direct. In addition, similar reviews were studied in Prospero and the Cochrane Library. For data analysis, softwares such as Mendeley, Excel, RStudio, and VOSviewer were used, and Robvis helped in plotting risk of bias results for studies performed with Cochrane tools. Results The six databases selected produced 824 studies. After applying eligibility criteria (inclusion and exclusion), removing duplicates, and applying filters 1 and 2, 15 studies were included in the present review. It was found that the most relevant sources came from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and that the most relevant keywords revolved around the terms (“device failure”, “infusion pumps”, “adverse effects”, “complications”, etc.). These results made clear that there remains substantial room for improvement as it relates to the study of accuracy and reliability of infusion. Conclusions We verified that the reliability and precision analysis of hospital infusion pumps need to be performed in a more detailed and consistent way. New developments, considering the model and IP specification, are intended, clearly explaining the adopted methodology.
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- 2023
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8. Recovery time in target controlled infusion versus manual infusion of propofol in total intravenous anaesthesia for endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography procedure using laryngeal mask airway-gastro: A randomised comparative study
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Ayushi Sahu, Debendra Kumar Tripathy, Bhavna Gupta, Praveen Talawar, and Rohit Gupta
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anaesthesia general ,endoscopy ,infusion pumps ,laryngeal masks ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Background and Aims : This study aimed to compare manual infusion versus target-controlled infusion (TCI) in total intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA) utilising laryngeal mask airway (LMA)-gastro during endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (ERCP) procedures. Methods: This was a single-blind randomised trial. Patients were randomly allocated into two groups. TCI group included 27 patients, where TCI of propofol was implemented with the Schnider pharmacokinetic model driven by a computer-controlled syringe pump. The TIVA group included 27 patients with a loading dose of 2 mg/kg of propofol, followed by manual infusion of 15 mg/kg/h for the first 15 min, 13 mg/kg/h for the next 15 min, then 11 mg/kg/h for 30 min and 10 mg/kg/h for 60 min and finally maintained at 9 mg/kg/h. The primary objective was to compare recovery time following cessation of propofol infusion in both groups. The difference in the total dose of propofol, time to achieve anaesthesia induction, first attempt success rate, ease of LMA-gastro insertion, ease of insertion, success rate of endoscope device and post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) discharge time were the secondary objectives. T-test and Chi-square test were used for statistical analysis. Results: The time required for the recovery was significantly less in the TCI group than in the TIVA group (mean ± standard deviation; 11.60 ± 2.27 versus 15.4 ± 3.25 minutes, P < 0.001). The duration of ERCP, ease of LMA and endoscope insertion were comparable between the groups. There was no post-operative recall of intra-operative events in the groups. Conclusion: TCI offers earlier recovery than TIVA in patients undergoing ERCP procedures using LMA-gastro.
- Published
- 2023
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9. Statistical approaches to accelerate the development of long-acting antiretrovirals for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis.
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Glidden, David V
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Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Cohort Studies ,Controlled Clinical Trials as Topic ,Data Interpretation ,Statistical ,Epidemiologic Research Design ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Medication Adherence ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Treatment Outcome ,HIV prevention ,implant ,long-acting injectable ,noninferiority ,pre-exposure prophylaxis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology - Abstract
Purpose of reviewThis review considers statistical issues in the design and analysis of the studies used to develop long-acting formulations of antiretrovirals for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).Recent findingAn abundant pipeline of products is maturing. Accelerating their evaluation as clinical products requires abandonment of noninferiority standards. Randomized trials should be based on the comparison of principled but innovative estimates of background HIV risk and enrich enrollment for those who do not desire current PrEP products. At every stage of testing, innovative analyses can be applied to help inform and accelerate later studies.SummaryThe development of new long-acting PrEP regimens can be accelerated by innovations in design, ingenuity in synthesizing data sources, and application of causal inference methods.
- Published
- 2020
10. Characterization of Effect of Repeated Bolus or Continuous Intrathecal Infusion of Morphine on Spinal Mass Formation in the Dog.
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Hildebrand, Keith, Page, Linda, Billstrom, Tina, Steinauer, Joanne, Eddinger, Kelly, Arjomand, Shervin, and Yaksh, Tony
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Bolus delivery ,intrathecal drug ,intrathecal granuloma ,intrathecal pump ,morphine ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Animals ,Dogs ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Female ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Injections ,Spinal ,Male ,Morphine ,Random Allocation ,Spinal Cord - Abstract
BACKGROUND: We determined whether intrathecally delivering the same daily dose of morphine (MS) at a fixed concentration of 25 mg/mL by periodic boluses versus continuous infusion would reduce intrathecal mass (IMs) formation in dogs. METHODS: Adult dogs (hound cross, n = 32) were implanted with intrathecal catheters connected to SynchroMed II infusion pumps. Animals were randomly assigned to receive infusion of 0.48 mL/day of saline or MS dosing (12 mg/day at 25 mg/mL) as boluses: x1 (q24hour), x2 (q12hour), x4 (q6hour), or x8 (q3hour) given at the rate of 1000 μL/hour, or as a continuous infusion (25 mg/mL/20 μL/hour). RESULTS: With IT saline, minimal pathology was noted. In contrast, animals receiving morphine displayed spinally compressing durally derived masses with the maximal cross-sectional area being greatest near the catheter tip. Histopathology showed that IMs consisted of fibroblasts in a collagen (type 1) matrix comprised of newly formed collagen near the catheter and mature collagen on the periphery of the mass. The rank order of median cross-sectional mass area (mm2 ) was: Saline: 0.7 mm2 ; x2: 1.8 mm2 ; x4: 2.7 mm2 ; x1: 2.7 mm2 ; x8: 4.2 mm2 ; Continuous: 8.1 mm2 , with statistical difference from saline being seen with continuous (p
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- 2019
11. Evaluating a handheld decision support device in pediatric intensive care settings
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Reynolds, Tera L, DeLucia, Patricia R, Esquibel, Karen A, Gage, Todd, Wheeler, Noah J, Randell, J Adam, Stevenson, James G, and Zheng, Kai
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Bioengineering ,Clinical Research ,Generic health relevance ,alert systems ,medication [N04.452.515.360.500] ,computers ,handheld [L01.224.230.260.550.500] ,human factors and ergonomics [F02.784.412] ,infusion pumps ,implantable [E07.505.254] ,medication errors [E02.319.529] ,Health services and systems - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate end-user acceptance and the effect of a commercial handheld decision support device in pediatric intensive care settings. The technology, pac2, was designed to assist nurses in calculating medication dose volumes and infusion rates at the bedside.Materials and methodsThe devices, manufactured by InformMed Inc., were deployed in the pediatric and neonatal intensive care units in 2 health systems. This mixed methods study assessed end-user acceptance, as well as pac2's effect on the cognitive load associated with bedside dose calculations and the rate of administration errors. Towards this end, data were collected in both pre- and postimplementation phases, including through ethnographic observations, semistructured interviews, and surveys.ResultsAlthough participants desired a handheld decision support tool such as pac2, their use of pac2 was limited. The nature of the critical care environment, nurses' risk perceptions, and the usability of the technology emerged as major barriers to use. Data did not reveal significant differences in cognitive load or administration errors after pac2 was deployed.Discussion and conclusionDespite its potential for reducing adverse medication events, the commercial standalone device evaluated in the study was not used by the nursing participants and thus had very limited effect. Our results have implications for the development and deployment of similar mobile decision support technologies. For example, they suggest that integrating the technology into hospitals' existing IT infrastructure and employing targeted implementation strategies may facilitate nurse acceptance. Ultimately, the usability of the design will be essential to reaping any potential benefits.
- Published
- 2019
12. Recovery time in target controlled infusion versus manual infusion of propofol in total intravenous anaesthesia for endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography procedure using laryngeal mask airway-gastro: A randomised comparative study.
- Author
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Sahu, Ayushi, Tripathy, Debendra Kumar, Gupta, Bhavna, Talawar, Praveen, and Gupta, Rohit
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INTRAVENOUS anesthesia ,LARYNGEAL masks ,PROPOFOL ,ANESTHESIA ,CHI-squared test - Abstract
Background and Aims: This study aimed to compare manual infusion versus target-controlled infusion (TCI) in total intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA) utilising laryngeal mask airway (LMA)-gastro during endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (ERCP) procedures. Methods: This was a single-blind randomised trial. Patients were randomly allocated into two groups. TCI group included 27 patients, where TCI of propofol was implemented with the Schnider pharmacokinetic model driven by a computer-controlled syringe pump. The TIVA group included 27 patients with a loading dose of 2 mg/kg of propofol, followed by manual infusion of 15 mg/kg/h for the first 15 min, 13 mg/kg/h for the next 15 min, then 11 mg/kg/h for 30 min and 10 mg/kg/h for 60 min and finally maintained at 9 mg/kg/h. The primary objective was to compare recovery time following cessation of propofol infusion in both groups. The difference in the total dose of propofol, time to achieve anaesthesia induction, first attempt success rate, ease of LMA-gastro insertion, ease of insertion, success rate of endoscope device and post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) discharge time were the secondary objectives. T-test and Chi-square test were used for statistical analysis. Results: The time required for the recovery was significantly less in the TCI group than in the TIVA group (mean ± standard deviation; 11.60 ± 2.27 versus 15.4 ± 3.25 minutes, P < 0.001). The duration of ERCP, ease of LMA and endoscope insertion were comparable between the groups. There was no post-operative recall of intra-operative events in the groups. Conclusion: TCI offers earlier recovery than TIVA in patients undergoing ERCP procedures using LMA-gastro. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. A qualitative analysis of intravenous smart pump usability
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Jeannine W. C. Blake, Sarah M. Fiske, and Karen K. Giuliano
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critical care nursing ,infusion pumps ,intravenous administration ,intravenous infusions ,user‐centered design ,Nursing ,RT1-120 - Abstract
Abstract Aim To understand the experience of critical care nurses when performing common, yet error‐prone, programming tasks on two unfamiliar intravenous smart pumps. Design A qualitative descriptive study using data collected during a previous quantitative pilot study. Methods Following completion of common intravenous programming tasks each participant was interviewed using a semi‐structured interview guide. All interview data were coded line‐by‐line and thematic analysis revealed themes across all participants' interviews. Results The following four themes were identified: appreciation for attractive design features, the need for efficiency, the importance of intuitive use and concern for patient outcomes. Overall, these themes provide evidence that nurses strongly prefer a more usable intravenous smart pump interface that integrates safeguards to efficiently improve patient outcomes. Findings support the need for intravenous smart pump technology to be developed with an intuitive interface that decreases the level of cognitive demand and will lead to improved patient safety.
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- 2022
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14. Intermittent convection-enhanced delivery of GDNF into rhesus monkey putamen: absence of local or cerebellar toxicity
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Luz, Matthias, Allen, Philip C, Bringas, John, Boiko, Chris, Stockinger, Diane E, Nikula, Kristen J, Lewis, Owen, Woolley, Max, Fibiger, H Christian, Bankiewicz, Krystof, and Mohr, Erich
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Stem Cell Research ,Neurodegenerative ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Neurological ,Animals ,Cerebellum ,Convection ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Drug Evaluation ,Preclinical ,Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Macaca mulatta ,Male ,Neuroprotective Agents ,No-Observed-Adverse-Effect Level ,Putamen ,Toxicity Tests ,Chronic ,GDNF ,Parkinson's disease ,Toxicology ,Purkinje cells ,Rhesus monkey ,Convection-enhanced delivery ,Parkinson’s disease ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has demonstrated neurorestorative and neuroprotective effects in rodent and nonhuman primate models of Parkinson's disease. However, continuous intraputamenal infusion of GDNF (100 µg/day) resulted in multifocal cerebellar Purkinje cell loss in a 6-month toxicity study in rhesus monkeys. It was hypothesized that continuous leakage of GDNF into the cerebrospinal fluid compartment during the infusions led to down-regulation of GDNF receptors on Purkinje cells, and that subsequent acute withdrawal of GDNF then mediated the observed cerebellar lesions. Here we present the results of a 9-month toxicity study in which rhesus monkeys received intermittent intraputamenal infusions via convection-enhanced delivery. Animals were treated with GDNF (87.1 µg; N = 14) or vehicle (N = 6) once every 4 weeks for a total of 40 weeks (11 treatments). Four of the GDNF-treated animals were utilized in a satellite study assessing the impact of concomitant catheter repositioning prior to treatment. In the main study, eight animals (5 GDNF, 3 control) were euthanized at the end of the treatment period, along with the four satellite study animals, while the remaining eight animals (5 GDNF, 3 control) were euthanized at the end of a 12-week recovery period. There were no GDNF-related adverse effects and in particular, no GDNF-related microscopic findings in the brain, spinal cord, dorsal root ganglia, or trigeminal ganglia. Therefore, 87.1 µg/4 weeks is considered the no observed adverse effect level for GDNF in rhesus monkeys receiving intermittent, convection-enhanced delivery of GDNF for 9 months.
- Published
- 2018
15. A Primer on Home Infusion Administration Methods.
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Loriaux, Alain, Desmond, Michael, and Li, Peng Cheng
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- *
DRUG delivery systems , *INFUSION therapy - Abstract
Home infusion therapy is a rapidly growing field in healthcare, allowing patients to receive postacute care at home at a fraction of the cost of an inpatient stay. Understanding the various drug delivery systems can facilitate a more seamless discharge to home with improved patient outcomes. Herein we review several home infusion methods of administration utilized to transition patients from hospital to home care for a variety of therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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16. How well is the female population represented in clinical trials with infusion therapies for Parkinson's disease? A systematic review and metanalysis.
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Smilowska K, Carvalho V, Szejko N, Costa J, Moro E, and Antonini A
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- Humans, Female, Levodopa administration & dosage, Levodopa therapeutic use, Clinical Trials as Topic, Male, Apomorphine administration & dosage, Drug Combinations, Carbidopa administration & dosage, Sex Factors, Parkinson Disease drug therapy, Antiparkinson Agents administration & dosage, Antiparkinson Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder affecting both sexes, but differences exist between male and female in clinical manifestations, functional impact of symptoms and hormonal influences. Therefore, representativeness of females in PD trials indirectly determines the external validity of the clinical research in this field., Objective: To estimate the representativeness of female in infusion therapy trials for advanced PD., Methods: PubMed and EMBASE databases were searched (1980 to September 2023), along with congress abstracts, to identify controlled clinical trials and large non-controlled studies on infusion therapies in PD enrolling >100 patients. Random-effect meta-analysis was conducted to estimate mean pooled prevalence of females included in the studies. Subgroup analyses were conducted accordingly to study design and intervention., Results: We included 15 studies (six studies on levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel, six on subcutaneous levodopa, two on subcutaneous apomorphine, and one on levodopa-carbidopa-entacapone intestinal gel). Sex was not a randomisation stratification factor in any of these studies. Only one study explored differences in the outcome estimated according to sex. Overall, the proportion of female included was 38% (95% CI:33%-43%; I
2 = 74%), without differences between studies assessing different type of interventions (p = 0.72) or between study design (p = 0.35). In two studies, females represented the majority of included patients., Conclusion: Female with advanced PD are underrepresented in infusion therapy trials. Most trials have overlooked sex-based biological differences that can impact clinical and functional outcomes, raising concerns about the generalizability of these findings to real-world contexts., (© 2025 The Author(s). European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.)- Published
- 2025
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17. Use of continuous infusion technique with pre-filled elastic pumps for prevention of centrally inserted central catheter occlusion in critically ill patients: A feasibility study.
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Jia W, Wu K, Song K, Yun W, Wang J, Yi Y, and Xu L
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Catheterization, Central Venous methods, Catheterization, Central Venous adverse effects, Catheter Obstruction, Infusions, Intravenous instrumentation, Infusions, Intravenous methods, Intensive Care Units, Infusion Pumps, Central Venous Catheters adverse effects, Critical Illness, Feasibility Studies
- Abstract
Background: Flushing catheter seems to be a crucial procedure for preventing centrally inserted central catheter (CICC) occlusion, which can flush the liquid and blood attached to the lumen into the bloodstream. The continuous infusion technique is characterized by continuous perfusion of flushing fluid and maintaining positive pressure in the lumen, which has been demonstrated to effectively prevent peripheral indwelling needle occlusion. However, the use of continuous infusion technique in CICC care among critically ill patients has been rarely described., Objective: To determine the feasibility and direct outcomes of continuous infusion technique in preventing CICC occlusion among critically ill patients., Methods: Participants from the intensive care unit who had a new centrally inserted central catheter placed within 24 hours were randomly assigned to 2 groups at a ratio of 1:1. They received pulsed infusion or continuous catheter infusion using pre-filled elastic pumps. During the trial period, on days 3 and 7 and whenever there were signs of catheter occlusion, whether the catheter occlusion was evaluated by the Catheter Injection and Aspiration Classification. Moreover, nurses meticulously observed the incidence of catheter-related complications, altered vital signs, and dysfunctions of elastic pump., Results: The catheter occlusion rates were 17.4% and 43.5% in participants who received continuous infusion (n = 23) and those who received pulsed infusion (n = 23), respectively. There was no significant difference in catheter occlusion rate between the 2 groups (χ² = 3.696, P = .06). The Kaplan-Meier curve results showed that the cumulative probability of central catheter occlusion events (within 7 days) in the continuous infusion group decreased (χ²=4.322, Log rank P = .04). Moreover, multivariate Cox regression indicated that the continuous infusion can reduce the risk of occlusion within 7 days by 91.8% (hazard ratio = 0.082, 95% confidence interval [0.014-0.487], P = .006). During the trial, no cases of detrimental altered vital signs and catheter-related complications in addition to occlusion were documented., Conclusions: In this study, continuous infusion technique with pre-filled elastic pumps was successfully used in critically ill patients for prevention of CICC occlusion, without major undesired effects. A larger cohort and a randomized clinical trial are warranted in order to establish its absolute efficacy in CICC care., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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18. Estimation of median effective effect-site concentration (EC50) during target-controlled infusion of propofol for dilatation and curettage – A prospective observational study
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Velraj Jaya, P Madhula, V R Hemanth Kumar, and Daniel Rajadurai
- Subjects
dilatation and curettage ,infusion pumps ,propofol ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Background and Aims: Propofol is the drug of choice for sedation in daycare procedures due to its pharmacokinetic properties. Propofol delivery using target-controlled infusion (TCI) pump reduces adverse effects like hypotension and apnoea. In this study, we estimated the median effective effect-site concentration of propofol in patients undergoing dilatation and curettage. Methods: Patients of the American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status class I–III, aged 40–70 years, undergoing elective dilatation and curettage were recruited for the study. All patients received 1 μg/kg fentanyl and 20 mg lignocaine. The first patient received an effect-site concentration of propofol at 4 μg/mL with TCI Schneider pharmacokinetic model. Failure was defined as patient movement at any time during the procedure. According to the 'BiasedCoin Design' up-and-down sequential method, the response of the previous patient determined the effect-site concentration of propofol of the next patient. The study was terminated once forty patients completed the procedures successfully. Probit analysis was used to determine EC50. Results: Fifty-three patients were recruited for the study. The various effect-site concentrations of propofol EC50, EC90, and EC95 in providing sedation for dilatation and curettage were 3.38 μg/mL, 4.29 μg/mL, and 4.60 μg/mL, respectively. The incidence of hypotension and apnoea were comparable among the various concentrations of propofol. The mean duration of the propofol infusion was 20 ± 2.86 min. The time to recovery from propofol sedation was 6.97 ± 1.76 min. Conclusion: A median effective effect-site concentration of 3.38 μg/mL of propofol is required to prevent patient movement during uterine dilatation and curettage.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Multi-infusion with integrated multiple pressure sensing allows earlier detection of line occlusions
- Author
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Frank Doesburg, Roy Oelen, Maurits H. Renes, Pedro M. Lourenço, Daan J. Touw, and Maarten W. Nijsten
- Subjects
Infusion ,Intravenous ,Algorithms ,Infusion pumps ,Multi-infusion ,Occlusion ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Occlusions of intravenous (IV) tubing can prevent vital and time-critical medication or solutions from being delivered into the bloodstream of patients receiving IV therapy. At low flow rates (≤ 1 ml/h) the alarm delay (time to an alert to the user) can be up to 2 h using conventional pressure threshold algorithms. In order to reduce alarm delays we developed and evaluated the performance of two new real-time occlusion detection algorithms and one co-occlusion detector that determines the correlation in trends in pressure changes for multiple pumps. Methods Bench-tested experimental runs were recorded in triplicate at rates of 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 ml/h. Each run consisted of 10 min of non-occluded infusion followed by a period of occluded infusion of 10 min or until a conventional occlusion alarm at 400 mmHg occurred. The first algorithm based on binary logistic regression attempts to detect occlusions based on the pump’s administration rate Q(t) and pressure sensor readings P(t). The second algorithm continuously monitored whether the actual variation in the pressure exceeded a threshold of 2 standard deviations (SD) above the baseline pressure. When a pump detected an occlusion using the SD algorithm, a third algorithm correlated the pressures of multiple pumps to detect the presence of a shared occlusion. The algorithms were evaluated using 6 bench-tested baseline single-pump occlusion scenarios, 9 single-pump validation scenarios and 7 multi-pump co-occlusion scenarios (i.e. with flow rates of 1 + 1, 1 + 2, 1 + 4, 1 + 8, 1 + 16, and 1 + 32 ml/h respectively). Alarm delay was the primary performance measure. Results In the baseline single-pump occlusion scenarios, the overall mean ± SD alarm delay of the regression and SD algorithms were 1.8 ± 0.8 min and 0.4 ± 0.2 min, respectively. Compared to the delay of the conventional alarm this corresponds to a mean time reduction of 76% (P = 0.003) and 95% (P = 0.001), respectively. In the validation scenarios the overall mean ± SD alarm delay of the regression and SD algorithms were respectively 1.8 ± 1.6 min and 0.3 ± 0.2 min, corresponding to a mean time reduction of 77% and 95%. In the multi-pump scenarios a correlation > 0.8 between multiple pump pressures after initial occlusion detection by the SD algorithm had a mean ± SD alarm delay of 0.4 ± 0.2 min. In 2 out of the 9 validation scenarios an occlusion was not detected by the regression algorithm before a conventional occlusion alarm occurred. Otherwise no occlusions were missed. Conclusions In single pumps, both the regression and SD algorithm considerably reduced alarm delay compared to conventional pressure limit-based detection. The SD algorithm appeared to be more robust than the regression algorithm. For multiple pumps the correlation algorithm reliably detected co-occlusions. The latter may be used to localize the segment of tubing in which the occlusion occurs. Trial registration Not applicable.
- Published
- 2021
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20. Continuous Transversus Abdominis Plane Nerve Blocks
- Author
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Khatibi, Bahareh, Said, Engy T, Sztain, Jacklynn F, Monahan, Amanda M, Gabriel, Rodney A, Furnish, Timothy J, Tran, Johnathan T, Donohue, Michael C, and Ilfeld, Brian M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Abdominal Muscles ,Amides ,Anesthesia ,Local ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Cold Temperature ,Cross-Over Studies ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Female ,Healthy Volunteers ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Nerve Block ,Pain Measurement ,Ropivacaine ,Neurosciences ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundIt remains unknown whether continuous or scheduled intermittent bolus local anesthetic administration is preferable for transversus abdominis plane (TAP) catheters. We therefore tested the hypothesis that when using TAP catheters, providing local anesthetic in repeated bolus doses increases the cephalad-caudad cutaneous effects compared with a basal-only infusion.MethodsBilateral TAP catheters (posterior approach) were inserted in 24 healthy volunteers followed by ropivacaine 2 mg/mL administration for a total of 6 hours. The right side was randomly assigned to either a basal infusion (8 mL/h) or bolus doses (24 mL administered every 3 hours for a total of 2 bolus doses) in a double-masked manner. The left side received the alternate treatment. The primary end point was the extent of sensory deficit as measured by cool roller along the axillary line at hour 6 (6 hours after the local anesthetic administration was initiated). Secondary end points included the extent of sensory deficit as measured by cool roller and Von Frey filaments along the axillary line and along a transverse line at the level of the anterior superior iliac spine at hours 0 to 6.ResultsAlthough there were statistically significant differences between treatments within the earlier part of the administration period, by hour 6 the difference in extent of sensory deficit to cold failed to reach statistical significance along the axillary line (mean = 0.9 cm; SD = 6.8; 95% confidence interval -2.0 to 3.8; P = .515) and transverse line (mean = 2.5 cm; SD = 10.1; 95% confidence interval -1.8 to 6.8; P = .244). Although the difference between treatments was statistically significant at various early time points for the horizontal, vertical, and estimated area measurements of both cold and mechanical pressure sensory deficits, no comparison remained statistically significant by hour 6.ConclusionsNo evidence was found in this study involving healthy volunteers to support the hypothesis that changing the local anesthetic administration technique (continuous basal versus hourly bolus) when using ropivacaine 0.2% and TAP catheters at 8 mL/h and 24 mL every 3 hours significantly influences the cutaneous effects after 6 hours of administration. Additional research is required to determine whether changing variables (eg, local anesthetic concentration, basal infusion rate, bolus dose volume, and/or interval) would provide different results.
- Published
- 2017
21. A qualitative analysis of intravenous smart pump usability.
- Author
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Blake, Jeannine W. C., Fiske, Sarah M., and Giuliano, Karen K.
- Subjects
PILOT projects ,EVALUATION of medical care ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,INTRAVENOUS therapy ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,DRUG infusion pumps ,QUALITATIVE research ,PRODUCT design ,THEMATIC analysis ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Aim: To understand the experience of critical care nurses when performing common, yet error‐prone, programming tasks on two unfamiliar intravenous smart pumps. Design: A qualitative descriptive study using data collected during a previous quantitative pilot study. Methods: Following completion of common intravenous programming tasks each participant was interviewed using a semi‐structured interview guide. All interview data were coded line‐by‐line and thematic analysis revealed themes across all participants' interviews. Results: The following four themes were identified: appreciation for attractive design features, the need for efficiency, the importance of intuitive use and concern for patient outcomes. Overall, these themes provide evidence that nurses strongly prefer a more usable intravenous smart pump interface that integrates safeguards to efficiently improve patient outcomes. Findings support the need for intravenous smart pump technology to be developed with an intuitive interface that decreases the level of cognitive demand and will lead to improved patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Start-up delay in syringe infusion pumps with different rates and priming techniques of intravenoust sets
- Author
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Natalie Marino Vieira, Maria Paula de Oliveira Pires, Gabriela Beltran Crespo, Larissa Perez Pardo Nascimento, Maria Angélica Sorgini Peterlini, and Mavilde Luz Gonçalves Pedreira
- Subjects
Critical care ,Infusion pumps ,Nursing ,Patient safety ,Syringes ,RT1-120 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective: To investigate infusion pumps start-up delay according to different brands of infusion pumps, flow rates and intravenous sets priming techniques. Method: The experimental study simulated clinical practice under controlled conditions, using a 50 mL syringe with NaCl 0.9% solution, two syringe infusion pumps (A and B), six rates (0.3, 0.5, 1.0, 5, 10 and 20 mL/h), two purging techniques (manually or infusion pump’s electronic bolus). Data were analyzed according to mean, standard deviation, Student’s t and ANOVA tests (p
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- 2022
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23. Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks
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Ilfeld, Brian M
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Neurosciences ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Bioengineering ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Catheterization ,Catheters ,Indwelling ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Infusions ,Parenteral ,Nerve Block ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Peripheral Nerves ,Risk Factors ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Clinical Sciences ,Anesthesiology - Abstract
A continuous peripheral nerve block (CPNB) consists of a percutaneously inserted catheter with its tip adjacent to a target nerve/plexus through which local anesthetic may be administered, providing a prolonged block that may be titrated to the desired effect. In the decades after its first report in 1946, a plethora of data relating to CPNB was published, much of which was examined in a 2011 Anesthesia & Analgesia article. The current update is an evidence-based review of the CPNB literature published in the interim. Novel insertion sites include the adductor canal, interpectoral, quadratus lumborum, lesser palatine, ulnar, superficial, and deep peroneal nerves. Noteworthy new indications include providing analgesia after traumatic rib/femur fracture, manipulation for adhesive capsulitis, and treating abdominal wall pain during pregnancy. The preponderance of recently published evidence suggests benefits nearly exclusively in favor of catheter insertion using ultrasound guidance compared with electrical stimulation, although little new data are available to help guide practitioners regarding the specifics of ultrasound-guided catheter insertion (eg, optimal needle-nerve orientation). After some previous suggestions that automated, repeated bolus doses could provide benefits over a basal infusion, there is a dearth of supporting data published in the past few years. An increasing number of disposable infusion pumps does now allow a similar ability to adjust basal rates, bolus volume, and lockout times compared with their electronic, programmable counterparts, and a promising area of research is communicating with and controlling pumps remotely via the Internet. Large, prospective studies now document the relatively few major complications during ambulatory CPNB, although randomized, controlled studies demonstrating an actual shortening of hospitalization duration are few. Recent evidence suggests that, compared with femoral infusion, adductor canal catheters both induce less quadriceps femoris weakness and improve mobilization/ambulation, although the relative analgesia afforded by each remains in dispute. Newly published data demonstrate that the incidence and/or severity of chronic, persistent postsurgical pain may, at times, be decreased with a short-term postoperative CPNB. Few new CPNB-related complications have been identified, although large, prospective trials provide additional data regarding the incidence of adverse events. Lastly, a number of novel, alternative analgesic modalities are under development/investigation. Four such techniques are described and contrasted with CPNB, including single-injection peripheral nerve blocks with newer adjuvants, liposome bupivacaine used in wound infiltration and peripheral nerve blocks, cryoanalgesia with cryoneurolysis, and percutaneous peripheral nerve stimulation.
- Published
- 2017
24. Continuous Adductor Canal Blocks
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Monahan, Amanda M, Sztain, Jacklynn F, Khatibi, Bahareh, Furnish, Timothy J, Jæger, Pia, Sessler, Daniel I, Mascha, Edward J, You, Jing, Wen, Cindy H, Nakanote, Ken A, and Ilfeld, Brian M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Adult ,Amides ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Automation ,California ,Catheters ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Female ,Femoral Nerve ,Healthy Volunteers ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Infusions ,Parenteral ,Isometric Contraction ,Knee ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Muscle Strength ,Nerve Block ,Pain Measurement ,Pain Threshold ,Prospective Studies ,Quadriceps Muscle ,Ropivacaine ,Skin ,Time Factors ,Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation ,Young Adult ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundIt remains unknown whether continuous or scheduled intermittent bolus local anesthetic administration is preferable for adductor canal perineural catheters. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that scheduled bolus administration is superior or noninferior to a continuous infusion on cutaneous knee sensation in volunteers.MethodsBilateral adductor canal catheters were inserted in 24 volunteers followed by ropivacaine 0.2% administration for 8 hours. One limb of each subject was assigned randomly to a continuous infusion (8 mL/h) or automated hourly boluses (8 mL/bolus), with the alternate treatment in the contralateral limb. The primary end point was the tolerance to electrical current applied through cutaneous electrodes in the distribution of the anterior branch of the medial femoral cutaneous nerve after 8 hours (noninferiority delta: -10 mA). Secondary end points included tolerance of electrical current and quadriceps femoris maximum voluntary isometric contraction strength at baseline, hourly for 14 hours, and again after 22 hours.ResultsThe 2 administration techniques provided equivalent cutaneous analgesia at 8 hours because noninferiority was found in both directions, with estimated difference on tolerance to cutaneous current of -0.6 mA (95% confidence interval, -5.4 to 4.3). Equivalence also was found on all but 2 secondary time points.ConclusionsNo evidence was found to support the hypothesis that changing the local anesthetic administration technique (continuous basal versus hourly bolus) when using an adductor canal perineural catheter at 8 mL/h decreases cutaneous sensation in the distribution of the anterior branch of the medial femoral cutaneous nerve.
- Published
- 2016
25. Estimation of median effective effect-site concentration (EC50) during target-controlled infusion of propofol for dilatation and curettage – A prospective observational study.
- Author
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Jaya, Velraj, Madhula, P, Hemanth Kumar, V, and Rajadurai, Daniel
- Subjects
DILATATION & curettage ,PROPOFOL ,PROBIT analysis ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SCIENTIFIC observation - Abstract
Background and Aims: Propofol is the drug of choice for sedation in daycare procedures due to its pharmacokinetic properties. Propofol delivery using target-controlled infusion (TCI) pump reduces adverse effects like hypotension and apnoea. In this study, we estimated the median effective effect-site concentration of propofol in patients undergoing dilatation and curettage. Methods: Patients of the American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status class I–III, aged 40–70 years, undergoing elective dilatation and curettage were recruited for the study. All patients received 1 μg/kg fentanyl and 20 mg lignocaine. The first patient received an effect-site concentration of propofol at 4 μg/mL with TCI Schneider pharmacokinetic model. Failure was defined as patient movement at any time during the procedure. According to the 'BiasedCoin Design' up-and-down sequential method, the response of the previous patient determined the effect-site concentration of propofol of the next patient. The study was terminated once forty patients completed the procedures successfully. Probit analysis was used to determine EC50. Results: Fifty-three patients were recruited for the study. The various effect-site concentrations of propofol EC50, EC90, and EC95 in providing sedation for dilatation and curettage were 3.38 μg/mL, 4.29 μg/mL, and 4.60 μg/mL, respectively. The incidence of hypotension and apnoea were comparable among the various concentrations of propofol. The mean duration of the propofol infusion was 20 ± 2.86 min. The time to recovery from propofol sedation was 6.97 ± 1.76 min. Conclusion: A median effective effect-site concentration of 3.38 μg/mL of propofol is required to prevent patient movement during uterine dilatation and curettage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Towards more efficient use of intravenous lumens in multi-infusion settings: development and evaluation of a multiplex infusion scheduling algorithm
- Author
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Frank Doesburg, Roy Oelen, Maurits H. Renes, Wouter Bult, Daan J. Touw, and Maarten W. Nijsten
- Subjects
Infusions, intravenous ,Algorithms ,Infusion pumps ,Injection site reaction ,Drug incompatibility ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Multi-drug intravenous (IV) therapy is one of the most common medical procedures used in intensive care units (ICUs), operating rooms, oncology wards and many other hospital departments worldwide. As drugs or their solvents are frequently chemically incompatible, many solutions must be administered through separate lumens. When the number of available lumens is too low to facilitate the safe administration of these solutions, additional (peripheral) IV catheters are often required, causing physical discomfort and increasing the risk for catheter related complications. Our objective was to develop and evaluate an algorithm designed to reduce the number of intravenous lumens required in multi-infusion settings by multiplexing the administration of various parenteral drugs and solutions. Methods A multiplex algorithm was developed that schedules the alternating IV administration of multiple incompatible IV solutions through a single lumen, taking compatibility-related, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic constraints of the relevant drugs into account. The conventional scheduling procedure executed by ICU nurses was used for comparison. The number of lumens required by the conventional procedure (LCONV) and multiplex algorithm (LMX) were compared. Results We used data from 175,993 ICU drug combinations, with 2251 unique combinations received by 2715 consecutive ICU patients. The mean ± SD number of simultaneous IV solutions was 2.8 ± 1.6. In 27% of all drug combinations, and 61% of the unique combinations the multiplex algorithm required fewer lumens (p 3 lm, versus 12% using the conventional procedure. Conclusion The multiplex algorithm addresses a major issue that occurs in ICUs, operating rooms, oncology wards, and many other hospital departments where several incompatible drugs are infused through a restricted number of lumens. The multiplex algorithm allows for more efficient use of IV lumens compared to the conventional multi-infusion strategy.
- Published
- 2020
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27. Comparison of the efficacy of an infusion pump or standard IV push injection to deliver naloxone in treatment of opioid toxicity
- Author
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Bita Dadpour, Maryam Vahabzadeh, and Babak Mostafazadeh
- Subjects
acid-base imbalance ,infusion pumps ,intensive care unit ,naloxone ,opioid ,treatment outcome ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Background: The optimal goal of naloxone infusion in intensive care units is to ameliorate opioid-induced side effects in therapy or eliminate the symptoms of opioid toxicity in overdoses. Accurately monitoring and regulating the doses is critical to prevent adverse effects related to naloxone administration. The present study aimed to compare treatment outcomes when using two methods of intravenous naloxone infusion: an infusion pump or the standard method. Methods: This study involved 80 patients with signs and symptoms of opioid overdose. The patients were randomly assigned into two groups with respect to intravenous infusion of naloxone by either an infusion pump or the standard method. Results: Comparison of study parameters between the two groups at 12 and 24 hours after intervention showed significantly more compensatory acid-base imbalance in the naloxone infusion pump group. In the group that received naloxone by pump, only one patient experienced withdrawal symptoms, but withdrawal symptoms appeared in 12 patients (30.0%) in the standard intravenous infusion group within 12 hours and in seven additional patients (17.5%) within 24 hours of intervention. In the group receiving pump-based naloxone infusion therapy, no another complications were reported; however in the standard infusion group, the 12-hour and 24-hour complication rates were 55.0% and 32.5%, respectively. The length of hospital stay was 2.85±1.05 and 4.22±0.92 days for the pump and standard infusion groups, respectively (P
- Published
- 2020
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28. Guidelines to practice in hospitals at home: safe and effective continuous infusion pumps substantially increased penicillin use in erysipelas treatment.
- Author
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Metsä-Simola N, Saarenketo J, Lehtonen H, Broman N, Häggblom T, Björklöf P, Sariola S, and Valta MP
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Finland, Aged, Adult, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Aged, 80 and over, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Infusion Pumps, Penicillins administration & dosage, Penicillins therapeutic use, Erysipelas drug therapy
- Abstract
Hospitals at home are increasingly offering outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) in an attempt to reduce costly inpatient care, but these settings favour broad-spectrum antibiotics that require less frequent dosing than penicillin. Benzyl penicillin could be delivered via continuous infusion pumps (eCIPs), but studies on their safety and efficacy in OPAT are scarce, and it remains unclear how much the availability of eCIPs increases penicillin use in real-life settings. We examined 462 electronic healthcare records of erysipelas patients treated between January 2018 and January 2022 in a large Finnish OPAT clinic. Average marginal effects from logistic models were estimated to assess how the introduction of eCIPs in December 2020 affected penicillin use and to compare clinical outcomes between patients with and without eCIPs. Introduction of eCIPs increased the predicted probability of penicillin treatment by 36.0 percentage points (95% confidence interval 25.5-46.5). During eCIP implementation, patients who received an eCIP had 73.1 (58.0-88.2) percentage points higher probability than patients without an eCIP to receive penicillin treatment. They also had about 20 percentage points higher probability to be cured at the time of discharge and 3 months after it. Patient and nurse satisfaction regarding eCIPs was very high. Benzyl penicillin eCIP treatment is effective and safe, and substantially increases the use of penicillin instead of broad-spectrum antibiotics. To reduce the risk of antimicrobial resistance, eCIPs could increasingly be promoted for use in OPAT clinics, and there should be adequate education and support in their implementation., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association.)
- Published
- 2024
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29. Malfunctions of Non-Electrical Infusion Pumps.
- Author
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Munzert E and Jacobshagen A
- Subjects
- Humans, Infusion Pumps, Equipment Failure
- Published
- 2024
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30. Intra-arterial PSMA injection using hepatic arterial infusion pump in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: a proof-of-concept study.
- Author
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Veenstra MMK, Vegt E, Segbers M, Franssen S, Koerkamp BG, Verburg FA, and Thomeer MGJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Hepatic Artery diagnostic imaging, Proof of Concept Study, Gallium Isotopes, Injections, Intra-Arterial, Female, Infusions, Intra-Arterial, Oligopeptides administration & dosage, Feasibility Studies, Infusion Pumps, Radiopharmaceuticals administration & dosage, Cholangiocarcinoma diagnostic imaging, Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography methods, Bile Duct Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Bile Duct Neoplasms drug therapy, Gallium Radioisotopes administration & dosage
- Abstract
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) targeted tracers show increased uptake in several malignancies, indicating a potential for peptide radioligand therapy. Intra-arterial injection of radiotracers can increase the therapeutic window. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of intra-arterial injection of [
68 Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and compare tracer uptake after intrahepatic arterial injection and intravenous injection. Three patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma received [68 Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 through a hepatic arterial infusion pump, followed by positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT). Two-three days later, patients underwent PET/CT after intravenous [68 Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 injection. All tumours showed higher uptake on the intra-arterial scan compared with the intravenous scan: the intra-arterial / intravenous standardised uptake value normalised by lean body mass ratios were 1.40, 1.46, and 1.54. Local intra-arterial PSMA injection is possible in patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. Local injection increases tumour-to-normal tissue ratios, increasing the therapeutic window for theranostic applications. RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Intra-arterial Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) injection increases the therapeutic window for potential theranostic application in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. KEY POINTS: Three patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma underwent PET/CT after intra-arterial and intravenous injection of [68 Ga]Ga-PSMA-11. Intra-arterial injection showed higher uptake than intravenous injection. PSMA-targeted imaging could be valuable for a subset of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma patients., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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31. Protective Effect of Antenatal Antioxidant on Nicotine-Induced Heart Ischemia-Sensitive Phenotype in Rat Offspring
- Author
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Xiao, DaLiao, Wang, Lei, Huang, Xiaohui, Li, Yong, Dasgupta, Chiranjib, and Zhang, Lubo
- Subjects
Medical Physiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Tobacco ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Pediatric ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acetylcysteine ,Animals ,Antioxidants ,Coronary Circulation ,Disease Susceptibility ,Drug Evaluation ,Preclinical ,Female ,Fetus ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Male ,Models ,Biological ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Myocardial Reperfusion Injury ,Nicotine ,Oxidative Stress ,Phenotype ,Phosphorylation ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Protein Kinase C-epsilon ,Protein Processing ,Post-Translational ,Random Allocation ,Rats ,Rats ,Sprague-Dawley ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Recovery of Function ,Ventricular Dysfunction ,Left ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Fetal nicotine exposure increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease later in life. The present study tested the hypothesis that perinatal nicotine-induced programming of heart ischemia-sensitive phenotype is mediated by enhanced reactive oxygen species (ROS) in offspring. Nicotine was administered to pregnant rats via subcutaneous osmotic minipumps from day 4 of gestation to day 10 after birth, in the absence or presence of a ROS inhibitor, N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) in drinking water. Experiments were conducted in 8 month old age male offspring. Isolated hearts were perfused in a Langendorff preparation. Perinatal nicotine treatment significantly increased ischemia and reperfusion-induced left ventricular injury, and decreased post-ischemic recovery of left ventricular function and coronary flow rate. In addition, nicotine enhanced cardiac ROS production and significantly attenuated protein kinase Cε (PKCε) protein abundance in the heart. Although nicotine had no effect on total cardiac glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) protein expression, it significantly increased the phosphorylation of GSK3β at serine 9 residue in the heart. NAC inhibited nicotine-mediated increase in ROS production, recovered PKCε gene expression and abrogated increased phosphorylation of GSK3β. Of importance, NAC blocked perinatal nicotine-induced increase in ischemia and reperfusion injury in the heart. These findings provide novel evidence that increased oxidative stress plays a causal role in perinatal nicotine-induced developmental programming of ischemic sensitive phenotype in the heart, and suggest potential therapeutic targets of anti-oxidative stress in the treatment of ischemic heart disease.
- Published
- 2016
32. Start-up delay in syringe infusion pumps with different rates and priming techniques of intravenoust sets.
- Author
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Marino Vieira, Natalie, de Oliveira Piresa, Maria Paula, Beltran Crespo, Gabriela, Perez Pardo Nascimento, Larissa, Sorgini Peterlini, Maria Angélica, and Gonçalves Pedreira, Mavilde Luz
- Subjects
INTRAVENOUS therapy equipment ,DRUG delivery systems ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,SYRINGES ,ANALYSIS of variance ,TIME ,SIMULATION methods in education ,DRUG infusion pumps ,TREATMENT delay (Medicine) ,T-test (Statistics) ,CRITICAL care medicine ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Gaucha de Enfermagem is the property of Revista Gaucha de Enfermagem and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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33. Multi-infusion with integrated multiple pressure sensing allows earlier detection of line occlusions.
- Author
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Doesburg, Frank, Oelen, Roy, Renes, Maurits H., Lourenço, Pedro M., Touw, Daan J., and Nijsten, Maarten W.
- Subjects
ALGORITHMS ,INTRAVENOUS therapy ,PRESSURE sensors ,STANDARD deviations ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,CLINICAL trial registries ,HERBAL teas - Abstract
Background: Occlusions of intravenous (IV) tubing can prevent vital and time-critical medication or solutions from being delivered into the bloodstream of patients receiving IV therapy. At low flow rates (≤ 1 ml/h) the alarm delay (time to an alert to the user) can be up to 2 h using conventional pressure threshold algorithms. In order to reduce alarm delays we developed and evaluated the performance of two new real-time occlusion detection algorithms and one co-occlusion detector that determines the correlation in trends in pressure changes for multiple pumps. Methods: Bench-tested experimental runs were recorded in triplicate at rates of 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 ml/h. Each run consisted of 10 min of non-occluded infusion followed by a period of occluded infusion of 10 min or until a conventional occlusion alarm at 400 mmHg occurred. The first algorithm based on binary logistic regression attempts to detect occlusions based on the pump's administration rate Q(t) and pressure sensor readings P(t). The second algorithm continuously monitored whether the actual variation in the pressure exceeded a threshold of 2 standard deviations (SD) above the baseline pressure. When a pump detected an occlusion using the SD algorithm, a third algorithm correlated the pressures of multiple pumps to detect the presence of a shared occlusion. The algorithms were evaluated using 6 bench-tested baseline single-pump occlusion scenarios, 9 single-pump validation scenarios and 7 multi-pump co-occlusion scenarios (i.e. with flow rates of 1 + 1, 1 + 2, 1 + 4, 1 + 8, 1 + 16, and 1 + 32 ml/h respectively). Alarm delay was the primary performance measure. Results: In the baseline single-pump occlusion scenarios, the overall mean ± SD alarm delay of the regression and SD algorithms were 1.8 ± 0.8 min and 0.4 ± 0.2 min, respectively. Compared to the delay of the conventional alarm this corresponds to a mean time reduction of 76% (P = 0.003) and 95% (P = 0.001), respectively. In the validation scenarios the overall mean ± SD alarm delay of the regression and SD algorithms were respectively 1.8 ± 1.6 min and 0.3 ± 0.2 min, corresponding to a mean time reduction of 77% and 95%. In the multi-pump scenarios a correlation > 0.8 between multiple pump pressures after initial occlusion detection by the SD algorithm had a mean ± SD alarm delay of 0.4 ± 0.2 min. In 2 out of the 9 validation scenarios an occlusion was not detected by the regression algorithm before a conventional occlusion alarm occurred. Otherwise no occlusions were missed. Conclusions: In single pumps, both the regression and SD algorithm considerably reduced alarm delay compared to conventional pressure limit-based detection. The SD algorithm appeared to be more robust than the regression algorithm. For multiple pumps the correlation algorithm reliably detected co-occlusions. The latter may be used to localize the segment of tubing in which the occlusion occurs. Trial registration Not applicable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Ambulatory Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks and the Perioperative Surgical Home
- Author
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Ilfeld, Brian M, Meunier, Matthew J, and Macario, Alex
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Nerve Block ,Perioperative Care ,Peripheral Nerves ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Published
- 2015
35. Convection-enhanced delivery for the treatment of glioblastoma
- Author
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Vogelbaum, Michael A and Aghi, Manish K
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Orphan Drug ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Brain Cancer ,Biotechnology ,Bioengineering ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Rare Diseases ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Brain Neoplasms ,Catheters ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Convection ,Glioblastoma ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable ,Treatment Outcome ,blood-brain barrier ,CED infusates ,convection-enhanced delivery ,delivery vehicles ,glioblastoma ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Effective treatment of glioblastoma (GBM) remains a formidable challenge. Survival rates remain poor despite decades of clinical trials of conventional and novel, biologically targeted therapeutics. There is considerable evidence that most of these therapeutics do not reach their targets in the brain when administered via conventional routes (intravenous or oral). Hence, direct delivery of therapeutics to the brain and to brain tumors is an active area of investigation. One of these techniques, convection-enhanced delivery (CED), involves the implantation of catheters through which conventional and novel therapeutic formulations can be delivered using continuous, low-positive-pressure bulk flow. Investigation in preclinical and clinical settings has demonstrated that CED can produce effective delivery of therapeutics to substantial volumes of brain and brain tumor. However, limitations in catheter technology and imaging of delivery have prevented this technique from being reliable and reproducible, and the only completed phase III study in GBM did not show a survival benefit for patients treated with an investigational therapeutic delivered via CED. Further development of CED is ongoing, with novel catheter designs and imaging approaches that may allow CED to become a more effective therapeutic delivery technique.
- Published
- 2015
36. Benzylpenicillin continuous infusion via elastomeric pumps for outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) of Listeria monocytogenes: A case report
- Author
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Oliver Troise, Stephen Hughes, Nupur Goel, Farhana Butt, and Hugo Donaldson
- Subjects
Listeria ,Bacteremia ,Ambulatory care ,Penicillin G ,Infusion pumps ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A randomized, triple-masked, active-controlled investigation of the relative effects of dose, concentration, and infusion rate for continuous popliteal-sciatic nerve blocks in volunteers
- Author
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Madison, SJ, Monahan, AM, Agarwal, RR, Furnish, TJ, Mascha, EJ, Xu, Z, Donohue, MC, Morgan, AC, and Ilfeld, BM
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Amides ,Anesthesia ,Local ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Double-Blind Method ,Female ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Block ,Pain Measurement ,Ropivacaine ,Sciatic Nerve ,Young Adult ,continuous peripheral nerve block ,perineural infusion ,perineural local anaesthetic infusion ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundIt remains unknown whether local anaesthetic dose is the only factor influencing continuous popliteal-sciatic nerve block effects, or whether concentration, volume, or both exert an influence as well.MethodsBilateral sciatic catheters were inserted in volunteers (n=24). Catheters were randomly assigned to ropivacaine of either 0.1% (8 ml h(-1)) or 0.4% (2 ml h(-1)) for 6 h. The primary endpoint was the tolerance to transcutaneous electrical stimulation within the tibial nerve distribution at hour 6. Secondary endpoints included current tolerance at other time points and plantar flexion maximum voluntary isometric contraction (22 h total).ResultsAt hour 6, tolerance to cutaneous stimulation for limbs receiving 0.1% ropivacaine was [mean (standard deviation)] 27.0 (20.2) vs26.9 (20.4) mA for limbs receiving 0.4% [estimated mean difference 0.2 mA; 90% confidence interval (CI) -8.2 to 8.5; P=0.02 and 0.03 for lower and upper boundaries, respectively]. Because the 90% CI fell within the prespecified tolerance ±10 mA, we conclude that the effect of the two concentration/volume combinations were equivalent. Similar negative findings were found for the secondary outcomes.ConclusionsFor continuous popliteal-sciatic nerve blocks, we found no evidence that local anaesthetic concentration and volume influence block characteristics, suggesting that local anaesthetic dose (mass) is the primary determinant of perineural infusion effects in this anatomic location. These findings suggest that for ambulatory perineural local anaesthetic infusion-for which there is usually a finite local anaesthetic reservoir-decreasing the basal rate while increasing the local anaesthetic concentration may allow for increased infusion duration without compromising postoperative analgesia.Clinical trial registrationNCT01898689.
- Published
- 2015
38. Oral Migalastat HCl Leads to Greater Systemic Exposure and Tissue Levels of Active α-Galactosidase A in Fabry Patients when Co-Administered with Infused Agalsidase
- Author
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Warnock, David G, Bichet, Daniel G, Holida, Myrl, Goker-Alpan, Ozlem, Nicholls, Kathy, Thomas, Mark, Eyskens, Francois, Shankar, Suma, Adera, Mathews, Sitaraman, Sheela, Khanna, Richie, Flanagan, John J, Wustman, Brandon A, Barth, Jay, Barlow, Carrolee, Valenzano, Kenneth J, Lockhart, David J, Boudes, Pol, and Johnson, Franklin K
- Subjects
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,1-Deoxynojirimycin ,Administration ,Oral ,Adult ,Area Under Curve ,Demography ,Fabry Disease ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Isoenzymes ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Recombinant Proteins ,Skin ,alpha-Galactosidase ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
UnlabelledMigalastat HCl (AT1001, 1-Deoxygalactonojirimycin) is an investigational pharmacological chaperone for the treatment of α-galactosidase A (α-Gal A) deficiency, which leads to Fabry disease, an X-linked, lysosomal storage disorder. The currently approved, biologics-based therapy for Fabry disease is enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with either agalsidase alfa (Replagal) or agalsidase beta (Fabrazyme). Based on preclinical data, migalastat HCl in combination with agalsidase is expected to result in the pharmacokinetic (PK) enhancement of agalsidase in plasma by increasing the systemic exposure of active agalsidase, thereby leading to increased cellular levels in disease-relevant tissues. This Phase 2a study design consisted of an open-label, fixed-treatment sequence that evaluated the effects of single oral doses of 150 mg or 450 mg migalastat HCl on the PK and tissue levels of intravenously infused agalsidase (0.2, 0.5, or 1.0 mg/kg) in male Fabry patients. As expected, intravenous administration of agalsidase alone resulted in increased α-Gal A activity in plasma, skin, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) compared to baseline. Following co-administration of migalastat HCl and agalsidase, α-Gal A activity in plasma was further significantly increased 1.2- to 5.1-fold compared to agalsidase administration alone, in 22 of 23 patients (95.6%). Importantly, similar increases in skin and PBMC α-Gal A activity were seen following co-administration of migalastat HCl and agalsidase. The effects were not related to the administered migalastat HCl dose, as the 150 mg dose of migalastat HCl increased α-Gal A activity to the same extent as the 450 mg dose. Conversely, agalsidase had no effect on the plasma PK of migalastat. No migalastat HCl-related adverse events or drug-related tolerability issues were identified.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT01196871.
- Published
- 2015
39. Continuous Transversus Abdominis Plane (TAP) Blocks for Postoperative Pain Control after Hernia Surgery: A Randomized, Triple‐Masked, Placebo‐Controlled Study
- Author
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Heil, Justin W, Nakanote, Ken A, Madison, Sarah J, Loland, Vanessa J, Mariano, Edward R, Sandhu, NavParkash S, Bishop, Michael L, Agarwal, Rishi R, Proudfoot, James A, Ferguson, Eliza J, Morgan, Anya C, and Ilfeld, Brian M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Generic health relevance ,Abdominal Muscles ,Amides ,Anesthetics ,Local ,Double-Blind Method ,Female ,Hernia ,Inguinal ,Hernia ,Umbilical ,Herniorrhaphy ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Block ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Ropivacaine ,Anesthesiology ,Regional Pain ,Postoperative Pain ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundSingle-injection transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block provides postoperative analgesia and decreases supplemental analgesic requirements. However, there is currently no evidence from randomized, controlled studies investigating the possible benefits of continuous TAP blocks. Therefore, the aim of this randomized, triple-masked, placebo-controlled study was to determine if benefits are afforded by adding a multiple-day, ambulatory, continuous ropivacaine TAP block to a single-injection block following hernia surgery.MethodsPreoperatively, subjects undergoing unilateral inguinal (N=19) or peri-umbilical (N=1) hernia surgery received unilateral or bilateral TAP perineural catheter(s), respectively. All received a ropivacaine 0.5% (20 mL) bolus via the catheter(s). Subjects were randomized to either postoperative perineural ropivacaine 0.2% or normal saline using portable infusion pump(s). Subjects were discharged home where the catheter(s) were removed the evening of postoperative day (POD) 2. Subjects were contacted on POD 0-3. The primary endpoint was average pain with movement (scale: 0-10) queried on POD 1.ResultsTwenty subjects of a target 30 were enrolled due to the primary surgeon's unanticipated departure from the institution. Average pain queried on POD 1 for subjects receiving ropivacaine (N=10) was a mean (standard deviation) of 3.0 (2.6) vs 2.8 (2.7) for subjects receiving saline (N=10; 95% confidence interval difference in means -2.9 to 3.4; P=0.86). There were no statistically significant differences detected between treatment groups in any secondary endpoint.ConclusionsThe results of this study do not support adding an ambulatory, continuous ropivacaine infusion to a single-injection ropivacaine TAP block for hernia surgery. However, the present investigation was underpowered, and further study is warranted.
- Published
- 2014
40. False positive radiographical evidence of pump catheter migration into the spinal cord.
- Author
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Dardashti, Simon, Chang, Eric Y, Kim, Robert B, Alsharif, Kais I, Hata, Justin T, and Perret, Danielle M
- Subjects
Adult ,Baclofen: administration & dosage ,therapeutic use ,Catheterization: adverse effects ,Catheters ,Indwelling ,False Positive Reactions ,Female ,Humans ,Infusion Pumps ,Implantable: adverse effects ,Injections ,Spinal: methods ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging: methods ,Multiple Sclerosis: drug therapy ,Muscle Relaxants ,Central: administration & dosage ,therapeutic use ,Muscle Spasticity: drug therapy ,surgery ,Spinal Cord: pathology ,surgery - Abstract
Intrathecal drug delivery systems are becoming an increasingly common modality used by physicians to treat patients. Specifically, chronic spasticity secondary to multiple sclerosis (MS) may be treated with intrathecal baclofen (ITB) therapy when oral antispasmodics do not provide adequate relief. ITB therapy is effective, localizes drug delivery, and does not have the same degree of intolerable systemic effects often seen with oral and parenteral medications. As the use of intrathecal drug delivery systems has become more common, so has the incidence of adverse events. ITB administration requires the surgical implantation of indwelling catheters and a pump reservoir. Although this therapy is useful in treating spasticity, risks unique to intrathecal drug delivery systems include medication dosing errors, pump malfunction, infection, and catheter breakage or dislocation. To our knowledge intrathecal pump catheter migration into the spinal cord is a very rare complication with only 2 such complications reported. We present a case of an intrathecal baclofen pump catheter that was initially believed to have migrated into the spinal cord and the innovative use of cinefluoroscopy and digital subtraction used to identify catheter placement. Moreover, after confirmation of the catheter position within the spinal cord on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) our team elected to perform a laminectomy, which demonstrated that the catheter was not in the spinal cord but was surrounded by arachnoid adhesions. We hope our efforts will provide the clinician insight into the common difficulties that arise and how best to troubleshoot them to serve this specific patient population and prevent potentially life-threatening complications.
- Published
- 2014
41. A pharmacologic activator of endothelial KCa channels enhances coronary flow in the hearts of type 2 diabetic rats
- Author
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Mishra, Ramesh C, Wulff, Heike, Cole, William C, and Braun, Andrew P
- Subjects
Obesity ,Heart Disease ,Diabetes ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Nutrition ,Cardiovascular ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adenosine ,Age Factors ,Animals ,Benzothiazoles ,Bradykinin ,Coronary Circulation ,Coronary Vessels ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Endothelium ,Vascular ,Heart ,Infusion Pumps ,Male ,Nitroprusside ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Potassium Channels ,Calcium-Activated ,Rats ,Rats ,Wistar ,Endothelium ,Coronary circulation ,Calcium-activated K+ channel ,Type 2 diabetes ,Vasodilation ,Calcium-activated K(+) channel ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Medical Physiology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
Endothelial dysfunction is a common early pathogenic event in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) who exhibit cardiovascular disease. In the present study, we have examined the effect of SKA-31, a positive modulator of endothelial Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (KCa) channels, on total coronary flow in isolated hearts from Goto-Kakizaki rats, a non-obese model of T2D exhibiting metabolic syndrome. Total coronary flow and left ventricular developed pressure were monitored simultaneously in isolated, spontaneously beating Langendorff-perfused hearts. Acute administrations of bradykinin (BK) or adenosine (ADO) increased coronary flow, but responses were significantly blunted in diabetic hearts at 10-12 and 18-20weeks of age compared with age-matched Wistar controls, consistent with the presence of endothelial dysfunction. In contrast, SKA-31 dose-dependently (0.01-5μg) increased total coronary flow to comparable levels in both control and diabetic rat hearts at both ages. Flow responses to sodium nitroprusside were not different between control and diabetic hearts, suggesting normal arterial smooth muscle function. Importantly, exposure to a sub-threshold concentration of SKA-31 (i.e. 0.3μM) rescued the impaired BK and ADO-evoked vasodilatory responses in diabetic hearts. Endothelial KCa channel activators may thus help to preserve coronary flow in diabetic myocardium.
- Published
- 2014
42. Treatment of postmastectomy pain with ambulatory continuous paravertebral nerve blocks: a randomized, triple-masked, placebo-controlled study.
- Author
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Ilfeld, Brian M, Madison, Sarah J, Suresh, Preetham J, Sandhu, Navparkash S, Kormylo, Nicholas J, Malhotra, Nisha, Loland, Vanessa J, Wallace, Mark S, Proudfoot, James A, Morgan, Anya C, Wen, Cindy H, and Wallace, Anne M
- Subjects
Humans ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Amides ,Treatment Outcome ,Ambulatory Care ,Nerve Block ,Mastectomy ,Infusions ,Parenteral ,Double-Blind Method ,Infusion Pumps ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Ropivacaine ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Infusions ,Parenteral ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundWe aimed to determine with this randomized, triple-masked, placebo-controlled study if benefits are afforded by adding a multiple-day, ambulatory, continuous ropivacaine paravertebral nerve block to a single-injection ropivacaine paravertebral block after mastectomy.MethodsPreoperatively, 60 subjects undergoing unilateral (n = 24) or bilateral (n = 36) mastectomy received either unilateral or bilateral paravertebral perineural catheter(s), respectively, inserted between the third and fourth thoracic transverse process(es). All subjects received an initial bolus of ropivacaine 0.5% (15 mL) via the catheter(s). Subjects were randomized to receive either perineural ropivacaine 0.4% or normal saline using portable infusion pump(s) [5 mL/h basal; 300 mL reservoir(s)]. Subjects remained hospitalized for at least 1 night and were subsequently discharged home where the catheter(s) were removed on postoperative day (POD) 3. Subjects were contacted by telephone on PODs 1, 4, 8, and 28. The primary end point was average pain (scale, 0-10) queried on POD 1.ResultsAverage pain queried on POD 1 for subjects receiving perineural ropivacaine (n = 30) was a median (interquartile) of 2 (0-3), compared with 4 (1-5) for subjects receiving saline (n = 30; 95% confidence interval difference in medians, -4.0 to -0.3; P = 0.021]. During this same period, subjects receiving ropivacaine experienced a lower severity of breakthrough pain (5 [3-6] vs 7 [5-8]; P = 0.046) as well. As a result, subjects receiving perineural ropivacaine experienced less pain-induced physical and emotional dysfunction, as measured with the Brief Pain Inventory (lower score = less dysfunction): 14 (4-37) versus 57 (8-67) for subjects receiving perineural saline (P = 0.012). For the subscale that measures the degree of interference of pain on 7 domains, such as general activity and relationships, subjects receiving perineural saline reported a median score 10 times higher (more dysfunction) than those receiving ropivacaine (3 [0-24] vs 33 [0-44]; P = 0.035). In contrast, after infusion discontinuation, there were no statistically significant differences detected between treatment groups.ConclusionsAfter mastectomy, adding a multiple-day, ambulatory, continuous ropivacaine infusion to a single-injection ropivacaine paravertebral nerve block results in improved analgesia and less functional deficit during the infusion. However, no benefits were identified after infusion discontinuation.
- Published
- 2014
43. Syringe-pump-induced fluctuation in all-aqueous microfluidic system implications for flow rate accuracy.
- Author
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Li, Zida, Mak, Sze Yi, Sauret, Alban, and Shum, Ho Cheung
- Subjects
Water ,Microfluidic Analytical Techniques ,Infusion Pumps ,Syringes ,Vibration ,Hydrodynamics ,Analytical Chemistry ,Chemical Sciences ,Engineering - Abstract
We report a new method to display the minute fluctuations induced by syringe pumps on microfluidic flows by using a liquid-liquid system with an ultralow interfacial tension. We demonstrate that the stepper motor inside the pump is a source of fluctuations in microfluidic flows by comparing the frequencies of the ripples observed at the interface to that of the pulsation of the stepper motor. We also quantify the fluctuations induced at different flow rates, using syringes of different diameters, and using different syringe pumps with different advancing distances per step. Our work provides a way to predict the frequency of the fluctuation that the driving syringe pump induces on a microfluidic system and suggests that syringe pumps can be a source of fluctuations in microfluidic flows, thus contributing to the polydispersity of the resulting droplets.
- Published
- 2014
44. Usability of volumetric infusion pumps in pediatric intensive care
- Author
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Elizandra Cassia da Silva Oliveira, Roberto Carlos Lyra da Silva, Gustavo Aires de Arruda, and Regina Célia de Oliveira
- Subjects
Infusion Pumps ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Ergonomics ,Pediatric Nursing ,Quality of Health Care ,Technology Assessment, Biomedical ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Nursing ,RT1-120 ,Mental healing ,RZ400-408 ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective: To analyze the usability of two infusion pump models in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Method: This is a cross-sectional study of exploratory descriptive quantitative approach. A task was carried out in a controlled environment using infusion pump with 72 nursing staff members from August to September 2018. The Methodological Guideline for Medical Care Equipment Assessment Studies and the quality model proposed by NBR ISO/IEC 9126-1 were followed. Descriptive statistical analysis was used applying Fisher’s exact test, binomial test and Mann-Whitney test. Results: 91.7% of tasks were completed. The infusion pump-2 model was associated (p < 0.001) with operationalization, tasks accomplished with non-conformities, use of a manual calculator (measure effectiveness) and task accomplishment time (measure efficiency). Conclusion: Efficacy and efficiency measures can evidence a better context of usability of IPs and identify interaction failures with the nursing staff to be improved in care practice.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. User-Centered Design: Developing the RELI Delivery System – a Low-Cost, Non-Electric, Pneumatic Infusion Pump.
- Author
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Abu-Haydar, Elizabeth, Katuntu, David, Bauer, James, Wollen, Alec, Eisenstein, Mike, Sherman-Konkle, Jill, Roche, Anthony, and Ruffo, Michael
- Subjects
DRUG infusion pumps ,AIR pumps ,MIDDLE-income countries ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH facilities ,USER interfaces ,RURAL electrification - Abstract
Purpose: Infusion pumps are the preferred method for intravenous delivery of drugs and fluids, and an essential tool in health facilities. Their high cost, complexity and reliance on electricity pose serious challenges to wide-spread use, availability and access in low- and middle-income countries. PATH developed the RELI Delivery System (RELI), a low cost, non-electric infusion pump to address these challenges. Input collected from fifty-nine newborn and maternal care providers and from seven national level decision makers in Uganda was used to guide product development, further informing product design requirements, and optimal design features to best serve their needs. Methods: A formative evaluation following a mixed methods approach including focus group discussions (FGDs), stakeholder interviews, and observations was used to collect data from end users. Results: Stakeholders provided critical input on the RELI prototype design features, safety criteria, and contexts of use of infusion pumps, as well as recommendations for design refinements. Infusion systems are greatly needed but not readily available and their use is limited to well-resourced higher level facilities, even though the need is high in non-tertiary care hospital where patient volume is high, resources are scarce, power is inconsistent, and facilities are understaffed and overcrowded. Users expressed a need for an affordable and simple device with an intuitive user interface, clear instructions for use, and basic safety features. Conclusion: The study provided important guidance for further design refinements based on input from respondents and confirmed the need for robust, affordable, infusion pumps that meet the requirements for use in low-resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. [Empirical Study on the Impact of Infusion Media on the Flow Rate of Infusion Pumps].
- Author
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Yao N, Bao L, Lin Z, Shen Y, and Zheng K
- Subjects
- Glucose administration & dosage, Saline Solution administration & dosage, Quality Control, Calibration, Parenteral Nutrition Solutions, Water, Infusion Pumps
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the impact of different infusion media on the flow rate of infusion pumps., Methods: Ten infusion pumps were randomly selected and tested for infusion rates using deionized water, saline solution, glucose solution, and parenteral nutrition solution. The infusion flow rate was set at 30 mL/h, and the testing methodology conformed to the standards for the calibration and quality control of syringe pumps and infusion pumps., Results: For infusion set A, the infusion rate was unaffected by the infusion media, remaining within the acceptable quality control standards. For infusion set B, when infused with deionized water, saline solution, and glucose solution, the infusion errors were within the quality control standards. However, when using parenteral nutrition solution as the infusion medium, the infusion error exceeded the acceptable quality control standards., Conclusion: Both the infusion set and the infusion medium can affect the flow rate of infusion pumps. It is crucial to calibrate the flow rate according to the specific infusion medium to reduce medical risks associated with infusion pumps during clinical use.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Morphine Infusion Pump at the End of Life-Evaluation With a Surprising Result.
- Author
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Schulte E, Struk S, and Nauck F
- Subjects
- Humans, Analgesics, Opioid administration & dosage, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Infusion Pumps, Male, Female, Morphine administration & dosage, Morphine therapeutic use, Terminal Care methods
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. [Translated article] Retrospective study of home antibiotic infusion therapy using elastomeric infusion pumps.
- Author
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Ferro Rodríguez S, Chantres Legaspi Y, Romay Lema EM, Ayuso García B, Castellano Copa P, Peinó Camba P, Barcia Losada A, and Rodríguez Díaz C
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Elastomers, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Infusion Pumps, Home Infusion Therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the experience of home antibiotic infusion therapy using elastomeric infusion pumps, administered to patients admitted to the Home Hospitalisation Unit of a tertiary hospital for 3 years and to analyse clinical evolution and mortality., Method: Retrospective observational study. The medical history of the patients included in the study was reviewed. Information was obtained on personal history, antimicrobial therapy received, and clinical evolution. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS® 19 software., Results: 81 patients were included, 61.7% men, with a mean age of 73.5±17.5 years. The most frequent comorbidities were diabetes mellitus (30.9%) and chronic kidney disease (28.4%). Patients received a mean of 11.9±8.5 days of antibiotic treatment in an elastomeric infusion pump. The main focus of infection was respiratory (27.2%), followed by bacteremia (16%) and skin and soft tissue infections (12.3%). Of the infections, 65.4% were monomicrobial, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa being the main microorganism involved (39.6%). The most commonly used antimicrobial was piperacillin/tazobactam (33.3%). The clinical course was good in 85.2% of the patients, but the mortality rate in the 30 days following the end of treatment was 24.7%. In the univariate analysis, a history of neoplasia in the last 5 years (p=.01) and having received fewer days of antibiotic therapy prior to the start of outpatient antimicrobial therapy in infusion pump (p=.04) were associated with worse clinical outcome. Age over 80 years was associated with better outcome (p=.03). The diagnosis of heart failure was associated with higher mortality (p=.026) and patients from surgical services, with lower mortality (p=.047). In the multivariate analysis, the presence of neoplasia was associated with unfavourable evolution (p=.012) and heart failure with higher mortality (p=.027)., Conclusions: Outpatient antimicrobial therapy in elastomeric infusion pumps is an alternative in patients requiring prolonged intravenous treatment, and age is not a conditioning factor for inclusion in these programs. However, the presence of certain comorbidities can negatively affect the clinical course and mortality of patients., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None declared., (Copyright © 2024 Sociedad Española de Farmacia Hospitalaria (S.E.F.H). Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Retrospective study of home antibiotic infusion therapy in elastomeric infusion pumps.
- Author
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Ferro Rodríguez S, Chantres Legaspi Y, Romay Lema EM, Ayuso García B, Castellano Copa P, Peinó Camba P, Barcia Losada A, and Rodríguez Díaz C
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Male, Aged, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Infusion Pumps, Elastomers, Home Infusion Therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the experience of home antibiotic infusion therapy using elastomeric infusion pumps, administered to patients admitted to the Home Hospitalization Unit of a tertiary hospital for three years and to analyse clinical evolution and mortality., Method: Retrospective observational study. The medical history of the patients included in the study was reviewed. Information was obtained on personal history, antimicrobial therapy received and clinical evolution. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS® 19 software., Results: Eighty-one patients were included, 61.7% men, with a mean age of 73.5 ± 17.5 years. The most frequent comorbidities were diabetes mellitus (30.9%) and chronic kidney disease (28.4%). Patients received a mean of 11.9 ± 8.5 days of antibiotic treatment in an elastomeric infusion pump. The main focus of infection was respiratory (27.2%), followed by bacteremia (16%) and skin and soft tissue infections (12.3%). Of the infections, 65.4% were monomicrobial, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa being the main microorganism involved (39.6%). The most commonly used antimicrobial was piperacillin/tazobactam (33.3%). The clinical course was good in 85.2% of the patients, but the mortality rate in the 30 days following the end of treatment was 24.7%. In the univariate analysis, a history of neoplasia in the last 5 years (p = 0.01) and having received fewer days of antibiotic therapy prior to the start of outpatient antimicrobial therapy in infusion pump (p = 0.04) were associated with worse clinical outcome. Age over 80 years was associated with better outcome (p = 0.03). The diagnosis of heart failure was associated with higher mortality (p = 0.026) and patients from surgical services, with lower mortality (p = 0.047). In the multivariate analysis, the presence of neoplasia was associated with unfavorable evolution (p = 0.012) and heart failure with higher mortality (p = 0.027)., Conclusions: Outpatient antimicrobial therapy in elastomeric infusion pumps is an alternative in patients requiring prolonged intravenous treatment, and age is not a conditioning factor for inclusion in these programs. However, the presence of certain comorbidities can negatively affect the clinical course and mortality of patients., (Copyright © 2024 Sociedad Española de Farmacia Hospitalaria (S.E.F.H). Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Handling errors in conventional and smart pump infusions: A systematic review with meta-analysis
- Author
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Ana Paula Amorim Moreira, Márglory Fraga de Carvalho, Roberto Carlos Lyra da Silva, Cristiano Bertolossi Marta, Eliana Rosa da Fonseca, and Maria Tereza Serrano Barbosa
- Subjects
Infusion Pumps ,Insulin ,Medication Errors ,Critical Care Nursing ,Intensive Care Units ,Review ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Nursing ,RT1-120 ,Mental healing ,RZ400-408 ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: To identify the scientific evidence on the frequency of handling errors of conventional and smart pump infusions in intravenous insulin therapy in intensive care units. Method: A systematic review with meta-analysis conducted in the Virtual Health Library, MEDLINE via PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science databases. Articles were assessed regarding the level of evidence by applying the Oxford Center for Evidence-Based Medicine Evidence Scale. Results: Twelve (12) publications were selected which met the eligibility criteria. The programming error rate using the conventional infusion pump ranged from 10% to 40.1%, and the smart pump technology error rate ranged from 0.3 to 14%. The meta-analysis of two studies favored the smart pump in reducing the relative risk of programming errors by 51%. Conclusion: Based on selected articles, the smart pump reduces the risk of programming errors.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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