Interactive Transcript
0:01
So here's a little question for you.
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So tell us the different parts of the needle.
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So if we start up top, there's
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the hub, the base of the needle.
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That connects to standard things like
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syringes via a luer lock mechanism.
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There's the shaft, the body of the needle, okay?
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And then there's the bevel, which is a
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little bit of a curved edge, you know?
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And the whole goal with that bevel
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is when we're getting access, we're
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pointing up towards the skin, ventrally.
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So that when we sort of get access, our
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wire then, oop, sort of exits out anteriorly
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and superiorly in order for us to sort
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of maintain our intravascular presence.
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So what are the key components
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of a vascular access toolbox?
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You guessed it, there's the needle.
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What's that?
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That's the guide wire, the mandrel wire.
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There is that, which is what?
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The end.
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inner dilator of a transitional dilator.
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And this transitional dilator is often four
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French, the outer portion that is tapered to 0.035 inches.
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035 inches.
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And this is the inner portion,
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which is either stiff or soft, and
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that's either tapered to 3 French or 0.018 inches.
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018 inches.
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So if you were to look at this, it's
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pretty clear what this is, right?
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This is a micropuncture kit.
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This is our bread and butter as
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it relates to vascular access.
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Here's our 21 gauge needle,
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which we've seen before.
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No surprises there.
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There's our inner transitional
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dilator, 3 French, tapered to 0.
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018 inch.
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And then there's the outer portion
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that allows us to convert to 0.
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035 inches.
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And there's our nice 0.
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018 inch wire, or our mandrel wire.
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If we were to look into the micropuncture
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kit, we look at that sort of transitional
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dilator when it's hooked up together
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as a unit, like a transformer itself.
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There's the outer 5 French catheter.
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There's the inner 3 French diameter.
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That allows us, again, to transition from
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0.018 inch, our micro wire, to our what?
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Our 0.035 inch working wire.
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58 00:01:58,744 --> 00:02:01,404 So when we talk about micropunctures,
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we're always talking about 21 gauge.
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And the beauty of that is that allows
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us to reduce trauma to the vessel,
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which is why a lot of folks use it.
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The negatives is, of course,
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we then need to go from 0.
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018 inch to 0.
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035, but our transitional
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dilator facilitates that.
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In the past, some people would use 18 gauges,
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you know, if you're sort of doing a lot of
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sort of peripheral arterial disease work
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and accessing grafts and things of that
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nature, you may go with an 18 gauge needle.
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And that allows immediate access.
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Boom.
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Transition to 0.035 inch wire, which is our working wire.
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77 00:02:30,760 --> 00:02:33,140 There's a scarred vessel, sort of, scarred sort
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of groin, you know, as they call it, sort of
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a little bit of a hostile groin, 18 gauges,
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allows you to get in and get straight to work.
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Trauma is really one of the downsides, one
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of the negatives, the fact that if you were
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to mistakenly get access and cause issues,
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you know, you really want to make sure
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that you hold good pressure after the fact.
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If we were to sort of think through vascular
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access, there are some other characteristics of
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our access that we need to keep in mind.
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One of which is the single-wall
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versus the double-wall technique.
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The double-wall technique is going through
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the ventral surface of the vessel into the
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intraluminal space out the dorsal posterior
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wall and then pulling back slowly and waiting
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for blood to exit from the hub of the needle.
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Then there's the single-wall, which is
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kind of like the Navy SEALs approach.
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Get in and get to work.
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You go from the outside through
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the skin and then into the what?
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Intraluminal space, right?
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So gets in, sees the blood. Usually, a good
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technique that's used via imaging guidance,
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ultrasound guidance, whereas the 18-gauge
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double-wall approach is
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often used with individuals that are getting
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landmark access, non-image guided access.
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So 18-gauge or 19-gauge double-wall is often used,
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and usually single-wall, 18-gauge or 21-gauge.
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Again, double-wall allows us
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to get access through.
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And then, in contrast to the single-wall
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technique, we're hitting ventral and dorsal walls,
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and then we're pulling back in order to
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ensure that we're in the vessel, ensuring that
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blood is actually exiting the hub, as we see here.
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So one of the things that's, I think, most
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important as we sort of move through our guidance
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is really understanding when do we use one
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versus the other, single versus double wall.
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So when should you use this double-wall technique?
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Well, if you have patients that have
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significant plaque, you may consider
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that a single-wall may not be achievable.
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So, maybe let's do a double-wall technique to
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get through the ventral surface, through the
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dorsal surface, and then be able to retract
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that needle to ensure that we're in place.
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So, this significant plaque actually
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increases the difficulty of the single
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wall access, so an alternative double
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wall access may actually be appropriate.
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So what is the advantage of using
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a double wall versus a single-wall
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needle?
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So let's sort of break this down.
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So, as I mentioned, one of the
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things about the double-wall technique
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is it's a technique that sort of
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ensures access, but it's more trauma.
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One of the beautiful things about it is that
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what we often don't consider is that if somebody
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has a lot of plaque in their vessel, perhaps
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in the ventral wall, if we're going with the
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single-wall technique, what can often happen is
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that we may actually think we're intraluminal,
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part intraluminal, part within the wall, the
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ventral wall, and we send a wire, and the
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wire then dissects the vessel, okay?
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The beauty of the double-wall
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technique is we go through and through.
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The risk of dissection actually has been reduced.
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But again, it cannot be overstated that
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we are causing additional trauma
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to the vessel with the double-wall
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technique in the posterior wall puncture.
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And this is one of the many reasons why
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the interventionists around the globe
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very much prefer the single-wall entry.
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So one of the things that I am particularly, uh,
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a proponent of is being mindful of complications.
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If we don't anticipate something and
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are aware that things can happen,
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we may actually succumb to those things.
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If we don't know that a dissection or a
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thrombosis or a non-target embolization
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is a potential complication of our
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procedure, we may, unbeknownst to us,
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end up falling prey to this very thing.
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So let's look at this case of a 57-year-old
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woman who presents with a complaint
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of right leg numbness about two days
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after a common femoral artery access.
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What does her angiogram show?
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It reveals a bit of
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an intramuscular dissection.
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And what we see is a spiral dissection through the
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vessel, and we see different layering of contrast
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within the common femoral and external iliac
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arteries, and we see an abrupt cutoff of contrast in
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this patient who has a flow-limiting dissection.
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There are times when the dissection
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is not flow-limiting and it may
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actually resolve spontaneously.
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A non-resolving dissection may
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actually require surgical repair.
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This is another dissection in an
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individual who had claudication
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of his left arm, left upper
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extremity, after he had a bit of a
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complicated brachial artery access, okay?
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So he had intended superior mesenteric artery
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stenting from a brachial access at an outside
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hospital, and then came in with this sort
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of arm claudication, not presyncope, which is
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one of the things that can actually occur in this
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patient, but what we see is this nice dissection
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flap, nice and clean, very subtle, at the origin,
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extending to the origin of the left subclavian
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artery in this patient who subsequently had an
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aborted access because of this flow-limiting,
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or in the case of this procedure, that was
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aborted catheter and wire obstructing dissection.
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So what's the advantage of using a 21-gauge
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versus an 18-gauge single-walled needle?
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Well, if the operator is unsuccessful
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with the initial stick, time to
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hemostasis actually could be faster.
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An unsuccessful stick with the large
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18-gauge needle requires a 5-minute compression for hemostasis.
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212 00:08:22,419 --> 00:08:24,380 If you are trying to maybe get to the
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vein, the common femoral vein,
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and you hit the artery, oh, not great.
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Got to wait five minutes, pull that needle out,
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and achieve compression-facilitated hemostasis.
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But, you know, the 21-gauge is less
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traumatic, and the 21-gauge needles are smaller
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and, in these situations, they can allow
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you to sort of, you know, transition to that
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0.018 inch that, again, in theory,
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requires you to then transition to the
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0.035 inch wire, which is, as we know, the working wire.
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