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1 catheter insertion was noninferior to early catheter insertion.
2 traindications for esophageal pressure (PES) catheter insertion.
3 dentifying pneumothorax after central venous catheter insertion.
4 passing score for subclavian central venous catheter insertion.
5 of full barrier precautions during arterial catheter insertion.
6 costal transthoracic echocardiography during catheter insertion.
7 mmended as a first choice for central venous catheter insertion.
8 erile-practice compliance for central venous catheter insertion.
9 ce-based infection control guidelines during catheter insertion.
10 ere obtained simultaneously with intravenous catheter insertion.
11 on changed dramatically 72 and 120 hrs after catheter insertion.
12 catheter insertion, and area in hospital of catheter insertion.
13 ladder pressure between the first and second catheter insertions.
14 US guidance was used for 2147 catheter insertions.
15 l catheter insertions, and 26 central venous catheter insertions.
16 g staff utilization and time spent to manage catheter insertions.
17 ternal jugular and subclavian central venous catheter insertions.
18 Nine patients had multiple sequential catheter insertions.
19 associated with guidewire exchanges and new catheter insertions.
21 the top quartile for in-ICU pulmonary artery catheter insertion (3.4-25.0% of patients) were more oft
22 ons, 1,272 arterial and 2,586 central venous catheter insertions, 457 fiberoptic bronchoscopies, and
24 n of the original technique for percutaneous catheter insertion allowed placement of a larger taper-t
25 Data examining the timing of central venous catheter insertion among critically ill patients admitte
26 ng score for internal jugular central venous catheter insertion and 11 (14%) of 76 residents met the
27 initiative aimed at improving central venous catheter insertion and care could decrease the rate of p
28 prospective high-quality data collection at catheter insertion and catheter removal was performed.
30 esidents' skills in simulated central venous catheter insertion and decreased complications related t
31 ygiene and best practices for central venous catheter insertion and maintenance can reduce rates of n
33 the association between early central venous catheter insertion and mortality in patients with septic
35 ng score for internal jugular central venous catheter insertion and only 11 of 47 (23.4%) met or exce
37 on during initial aseptic preparation during catheter insertion and subsequent guidewire exchange.
38 catheterization, using aseptic technique for catheter insertion, and adhering to proper catheter care
39 ired for stem cell mobilization, intravenous catheter insertion, and apheresis and a median of 9 plat
40 uded total catheter days, anatomical site of catheter insertion, and area in hospital of catheter ins
41 ommended barrier precautions during arterial catheter insertion, and only 15% reported using full bar
43 rmed a median of 10 intubations, 14 arterial catheter insertions, and 26 central venous catheter inse
44 ikely than physicians to list central venous catheter insertion as an important barrier (38% vs. 5%;
46 e was 1 renal artery dissection during guide catheter insertion, before denervation, corrected by ren
47 rations are significantly more effective for catheter insertion care than povidone-iodine solutions t
48 terventions: educating the staff; creating a catheter insertion cart; asking providers daily whether
50 from children with stage 5 CKD at time of PD catheter insertion (CKD5 group), children with establish
51 ne were significantly higher after the first catheter insertion compared to the second insertion, reg
52 limited barrier precautions during arterial catheter insertion, consisting of sterile gloves, a surg
53 rtality associated with early central venous catheter insertion decreased after publication of eviden
54 completed a detailed questionnaire for each catheter insertion, designed to detect potential complic
55 Data collected included number and type of catheter insertions, duration of use, reason for removal
56 ring uterine bleeding, technical issues with catheter insertion during embryo transfer, and secondary
57 ed the hypothesis that prompt central venous catheter insertion during hospitalization among patients
59 me ultrasound guidance during central venous catheter insertion has become a standard of care, postin
61 ensure trainee competence in central venous catheter insertion in the setting of variable training a
64 on the balloon 24 hrs after pulmonary artery catheter insertion, increasing dramatically at 72 and 12
65 le-operator ultrasound-guided central venous catheter insertion is effective in verifying proper tip
67 tral venous cannulation for pulmonary artery catheter insertion mandates catheter removal and repair
70 passing score for subclavian central venous catheter insertion: mean (internal jugular) = 50.6%, SD
71 umber of central venous and pulmonary artery catheter insertions; number of complete blood counts, el
72 tio, 1.67; 95% CI, 0.94-2.94), or central IV catheter insertion (odds ratio, 1.81; 95% CI, 1.02-3.21)
73 rse containing video clips of central venous catheter insertions on compliance with sterile practice.
76 tes highly variable simulated central venous catheter insertion performance among a national cohort o
77 tending physicians' simulated central venous catheter insertion performance to the same simulated per
78 ovements in infection control, or changes in catheter insertion practices may be contributing to thes
79 g CR-BSIs; and empowering nurses to stop the catheter insertion procedure if a violation of the guide
81 ions (transseptal puncture, sheath flushing, catheter insertion, pulmonary vein venography, and sheat
82 a stronger COE showed that ultrasound-guided catheter insertion reduced phlebitis/thrombophlebitis in
83 infection rates and safety outcomes (central catheter insertions, repairs, and hospitalizations) befo
85 ound examination of both legs before femoral catheter insertion revealed no sign of venous thrombosis
87 rtality associated with early central venous catheter insertion significantly decreased from a multiv
92 al number of patients screened); idle/unused catheters; insertion site complications, substandard dre
93 Anisotropy reductions near microdialysis catheter insertion sites were highly correlated with red
98 Using a previously published central venous catheter insertion skills checklist, we compared Veteran
99 ll barrier precautions during central venous catheter insertion; subcutaneous tunneling short-term ca
102 mly assigned within 12 hrs of central venous catheter insertion to receive either heparin or 0.9% sod
103 use of ultrasound can reduce central venous catheter insertion to use time, exposure to radiation, a
105 tors associated with in-ICU pulmonary artery catheter insertion using multilevel mixed effects logist
106 trasound-guided, right-sided, central venous catheter insertion verifies proper placement and shorten
107 e subset of children for whom central venous catheter insertion was attempted (per-protocol populatio
110 cated that management without early arterial catheter insertion was noninferior to early catheter ins
111 P = .04) and an increased number of drainage catheter insertions were noted in group 1 compared with
112 ollowing procedures: turning, central venous catheter insertion, wound drain removal, wound care, tra