Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit

Objective:Iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in paediatric patients is a well-recognised complication of vascular access. This retrospective review of a paediatric intensive care unit identified patients who developed iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia between January 2008 and July 2013. Methods: The medi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mumba, Jesse Musokota
Other Authors: Hodges, Owen
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20838
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-20838
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-208382020-10-06T05:11:23Z Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit Mumba, Jesse Musokota Hodges, Owen Thomas, Jenny Anaesthesiology Paediatric acute limb ischaemia complications of arterial cannulation treatment algorithms umbilical artery catheter complication Objective:Iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in paediatric patients is a well-recognised complication of vascular access. This retrospective review of a paediatric intensive care unit identified patients who developed iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia between January 2008 and July 2013. Methods: The medical records of inpatients diagnosed with acute limb ischaemia during the study period were reviewed. Patients with other causes of acute limb ischaemia were excluded. A descriptive analysis of demographics, primary diagnosis, type of vascular access used, affected anatomical region, clinical presentation, type of therapy, type of block, response to intervention used and outcomes was conducted. Results:A total of 28 patients presented with signs of acute limb ischaemia, of whom 28.6% were aged <30 days, 46.4 % were between one and 12 months and 25% were between one and five years old; 78.6% of the affected limbs were lower limbs. Four patients had resolution of ischaemia upon removal of the vascular access devices. 23 patients received various forms of pharmacological sympathectomy, in addition to conservative therapy. One patient had missing data on the type of sympathectomy that was done. The response to the sympathectomies was: 60.9% good, 8.7% moderate, 8.7% poor and in 21.7% no responses. Documented tissue loss related to the ischaemia occurred in six (21.4%) of the 28 patients. Conclusions: Iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in children are usually managed without surgical intervention. Pharmacological sympathectomies lead to increased blood flow to the affected limb via vasodilatation of collateral vessels, with an added advantage of reducing ischemic pain. The improved blood flow is postulated to avoid and/or minimise the amount of tissue loss. Pharmacological sympathectomies may, thus, have a role to play in th e management of iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in the paediatric population. 2016-07-27T10:15:23Z 2016-07-27T10:15:23Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20838 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Anaesthesia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Anaesthesiology
Paediatric
acute limb ischaemia
complications of arterial cannulation
treatment algorithms
umbilical artery catheter complication
spellingShingle Anaesthesiology
Paediatric
acute limb ischaemia
complications of arterial cannulation
treatment algorithms
umbilical artery catheter complication
Mumba, Jesse Musokota
Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
description Objective:Iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in paediatric patients is a well-recognised complication of vascular access. This retrospective review of a paediatric intensive care unit identified patients who developed iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia between January 2008 and July 2013. Methods: The medical records of inpatients diagnosed with acute limb ischaemia during the study period were reviewed. Patients with other causes of acute limb ischaemia were excluded. A descriptive analysis of demographics, primary diagnosis, type of vascular access used, affected anatomical region, clinical presentation, type of therapy, type of block, response to intervention used and outcomes was conducted. Results:A total of 28 patients presented with signs of acute limb ischaemia, of whom 28.6% were aged <30 days, 46.4 % were between one and 12 months and 25% were between one and five years old; 78.6% of the affected limbs were lower limbs. Four patients had resolution of ischaemia upon removal of the vascular access devices. 23 patients received various forms of pharmacological sympathectomy, in addition to conservative therapy. One patient had missing data on the type of sympathectomy that was done. The response to the sympathectomies was: 60.9% good, 8.7% moderate, 8.7% poor and in 21.7% no responses. Documented tissue loss related to the ischaemia occurred in six (21.4%) of the 28 patients. Conclusions: Iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in children are usually managed without surgical intervention. Pharmacological sympathectomies lead to increased blood flow to the affected limb via vasodilatation of collateral vessels, with an added advantage of reducing ischemic pain. The improved blood flow is postulated to avoid and/or minimise the amount of tissue loss. Pharmacological sympathectomies may, thus, have a role to play in th e management of iatrogenic acute limb ischaemia in the paediatric population.
author2 Hodges, Owen
author_facet Hodges, Owen
Mumba, Jesse Musokota
author Mumba, Jesse Musokota
author_sort Mumba, Jesse Musokota
title Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
title_short Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
title_full Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
title_fullStr Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed Audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
title_sort audit of acute limb ischaemia in a paediatric intensive care unit
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20838
work_keys_str_mv AT mumbajessemusokota auditofacutelimbischaemiainapaediatricintensivecareunit
_version_ 1719349290958061568