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What is Vascular Access and Why Is It Important?

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So our first learning objective, defining

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vascular access and identifying important

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equipment used during vascular access.

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The first question is, what is vascular access?

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It is the percutaneous, so through

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the skin, cannulation of an anatomical

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point within the vasculature.

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We're dealing with arteries or veins, vasculature.

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Obviously, our focus today is on the artery,

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but you can get access to a vein, which will be

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another module, which we'll sort of take in full.

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In order to get access into the blood

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vessel, it takes some time and some

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technique and some considerations, which

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we will outline in our conversations today.

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But what I want to sort of share with you

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is, once you are in the artery, you can do

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everything that interventional radiologists do.

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You can place this being a fenestrated endograft

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that we placed when I was in fellowship.

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This being a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma

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that ended up coming to me for radioembolization.

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This being a patient who had a large left

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thigh malformation that we ended up embolizing.

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This being a patient who had a previous stent

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in his superficial femoral artery placed by

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a cardiologist at an outside hospital, then

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presented to us with resumption of his treatment.

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One to two block claudication.

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So once you're in the vessel and you're able

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to successfully achieve that real access

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and closure, you can essentially accomplish

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the great things that interventionalists

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can perform intravascularly.

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So why is proper vascular access so important?

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Well, we touched on it before, but it

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is the foundational practice, the first

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step that is necessary for us to perform

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any of the great clinical interventions.

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Procedures that we as interventionists

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perform on a daily basis.

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And without it, the safe, successful

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vascular access, no procedure can proceed.

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You know, it's like being able to sort of work

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with a pilot who can fly a plane at 10,000 feet

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but can't get it there or cannot land it.

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So this is a fundamental skill

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that needs to be mastered.

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It is the thing that, once you master it,

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you are able to do and proceed to the next.

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So let's look at these tools that I

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consider to be sort of the staples, the most

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important sort of rubrics as we prepare.

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There's the needle.

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This allows us to sort of puncture the

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skin to get access into the blood vessel,

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the artery in this particular case.

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There's the wire.

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It is the railroad that we move through

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the vessel to guide and to serve as a

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platform for other interventional equipment.

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Then there's the sheath.

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It's sort of the doorway.

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It's the doorway to the blood vessel that

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sort of hangs out right from the point.

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The dermatotomy to the arteriotomy in this case.

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That allows us to move a catheter in

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and out, and then there are the catheters.

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The hollow tubes that are curved and shaped in

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order to get into the nooks and crannies and

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the vasculature that we all choose to get into.

Report

Faculty

Mikhail CSS Higgins, MD, MPH

Director, Radiology Medical Student Clerkships; Director, ESIR

Boston University Medical Center

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Ultrasound

Interventional

Iatrogenic

Fluoroscopy

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