TY - JOUR
T1 - Passive Blood/Contrast Agent Exchange in Angiographic Catheters and Its Effects on Platelets
AU - Rittenbach, James D.
AU - Smith, Douglas C.
AU - Bull, Brian S.
N1 - A static column of contrast agent or saline in an angiographic catheter will passively exchange with blood during angiography. The authors investigated the time course of this exchange in 5.5- and 7-F polyethylene catheters inclined at various angles.
PY - 1992
Y1 - 1992
N2 - A static column of contrast agent or saline in an angiographic catheter will passively exchange with blood during angiography. The authors investigated the time course of this exchange in 5.5- and 7-F polyethylene catheters inclined at various angles. Passive blood exchange occurred 2 cm into the catheters within 7–15 seconds at most catheter tip angles, except for those catheters oriented so that their tips were nearly horizontal. In a separate series of experiments, the effect of contrast agent on platelet function and blood clotting was analyzed. The agent was sufficiently diluted in blood so as to simulate an angiographic procedure. The studies were performed in 60 cylindrical polyethylene containers with both unheparinized and heparinized blood. Use of an ionic contrast agent, more than a nonionic agent, lengthened the time for platelet aggregation (mean increases for ionic vs nonionic agents were 46.4 and 37.1 seconds, for unheparinized and heparinized blood, respectively), platelet adhesion to polyethylene surfaces (mean increases, 46.0 and 64.2 seconds), and platelet-stimulated coagulation (mean increases, 38.5 and 43.9 seconds). Conventional, intermittent flushing with saline or filling the catheter with contrast agent may be insufficient to prevent blood from rapidly back-filling the catheter tips. Contrast agents (ionic more than nonionic) distributed in the patient's blood volume inhibit platelet coating of catheter lumens and/or blood clotting under such circumstances.
AB - A static column of contrast agent or saline in an angiographic catheter will passively exchange with blood during angiography. The authors investigated the time course of this exchange in 5.5- and 7-F polyethylene catheters inclined at various angles. Passive blood exchange occurred 2 cm into the catheters within 7–15 seconds at most catheter tip angles, except for those catheters oriented so that their tips were nearly horizontal. In a separate series of experiments, the effect of contrast agent on platelet function and blood clotting was analyzed. The agent was sufficiently diluted in blood so as to simulate an angiographic procedure. The studies were performed in 60 cylindrical polyethylene containers with both unheparinized and heparinized blood. Use of an ionic contrast agent, more than a nonionic agent, lengthened the time for platelet aggregation (mean increases for ionic vs nonionic agents were 46.4 and 37.1 seconds, for unheparinized and heparinized blood, respectively), platelet adhesion to polyethylene surfaces (mean increases, 46.0 and 64.2 seconds), and platelet-stimulated coagulation (mean increases, 38.5 and 43.9 seconds). Conventional, intermittent flushing with saline or filling the catheter with contrast agent may be insufficient to prevent blood from rapidly back-filling the catheter tips. Contrast agents (ionic more than nonionic) distributed in the patient's blood volume inhibit platelet coating of catheter lumens and/or blood clotting under such circumstances.
KW - Angiography, contrast media
KW - Blood, coagulation
KW - Contrast media, comparative studies
KW - Contrast media, effects
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U2 - 10.1016/S1051-0443(92)72925-X
DO - 10.1016/S1051-0443(92)72925-X
M3 - Article
C2 - 1446130
SN - 1051-0443
VL - 3
SP - 685
EP - 691
JO - Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology
JF - Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology
IS - 4
ER -