If the pt is in shock, you wont see that EJ vein, and need to identify the location, and not that easy, but its very impressive though, for the person being a volunteer such a risky procedure.
My only coment is that this is supposed to be a sterile procedure, and i don`t see you using any kind of anti-septic product or sterile covers. This can be very dangerous if it should get infected. Anyway I really think this is none of my business...
I do this every week. Work in anaesthesia department.It's our preferred iv route in case of severe haemorrhage. Some times in difficult iv lines as well. Can put very large cannula 14G on it. Even can convert it into external jugular CVL.
I am from Recife in Brazil south america and i have to do these procedures sometimes when i am at work cause sometimes you just don't have someone with a good peripheral access handy...
This was just done for fun. No other reason other than boredom in Iraq. This is not a central line. No health benefits from performing IV access this way other than the size of the vein and the ability to place a larger catheter in it. For this I was using an 18g just to reduce the pain for my victim.
@shesingsFORall No. A CVC (Central Line) would generally be inserted through your internal jugular vein and then fed into your superior vena cava. This is an IV catheter being inserted into the external jugular vein. This is a much smaller vessel. Mind you, there are several areas that a CVC can be inserted - It's just my observation that the IJ seems to be most common.
Neat. I know this is gonna sound ignorant, but what are the health benefits of doing this? Draw out toxins? Pain Medication? I'm just asking so I can learn something new.
@BloodLust1121 its to deliver a large amount of fluids in a short period of timeto replace blood for trauma patients that have lost a lot of blood, and for medication administration, that vein is a huge vein so you can get a liter of fluid in their in a matter of minutes, also if you can't obtain IV access anywhere else this can be another option.
If the pt is in shock, you wont see that EJ vein, and need to identify the location, and not that easy, but its very impressive though, for the person being a volunteer such a risky procedure.
kolwinko 3 weeks ago
Always good being able to train procedures.
My only coment is that this is supposed to be a sterile procedure, and i don`t see you using any kind of anti-septic product or sterile covers. This can be very dangerous if it should get infected. Anyway I really think this is none of my business...
ricardohideochun 3 months ago
Good job, thanks for all you do!
debbiemarler 3 months ago
ok, now question for the patient. How much does it hurt?
kledoo 4 months ago
You don't write "it's finest", you write "its finest"! "It's" means "it is"!
WolfySnackrib666 4 months ago
I do this every week. Work in anaesthesia department.It's our preferred iv route in case of severe haemorrhage. Some times in difficult iv lines as well. Can put very large cannula 14G on it. Even can convert it into external jugular CVL.
beeshyak 5 months ago
Even though you did this out of bordem I got to see how you can do an IV into the Jugular. Thank you for the video.
34Pippy 5 months ago
I am from Recife in Brazil south america and i have to do these procedures sometimes when i am at work cause sometimes you just don't have someone with a good peripheral access handy...
thanks for sharing this videos with us ...
claudioagmfilho8 7 months ago
lol....NICE....Navy Corpsman does it better...haha (One Team One Fight)
-Doc Nelson
nelly8706 11 months ago
This was just done for fun. No other reason other than boredom in Iraq. This is not a central line. No health benefits from performing IV access this way other than the size of the vein and the ability to place a larger catheter in it. For this I was using an 18g just to reduce the pain for my victim.
jkellyvt78 1 year ago
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why use a green 18 gauge jelco? It defeats the objective of large bore IV access.
basramedic 1 year ago
Comment removed
basramedic 1 year ago
So this is a Central Line? So what is it that they insert into the vien in your arm supirior to the ulna and elbow? Is that a central line also?
shesingsFORall 1 year ago
@shesingsFORall No. A CVC (Central Line) would generally be inserted through your internal jugular vein and then fed into your superior vena cava. This is an IV catheter being inserted into the external jugular vein. This is a much smaller vessel. Mind you, there are several areas that a CVC can be inserted - It's just my observation that the IJ seems to be most common.
MedicalLearning 11 months ago
Класс
D0C1000 1 year ago
Neat. I know this is gonna sound ignorant, but what are the health benefits of doing this? Draw out toxins? Pain Medication? I'm just asking so I can learn something new.
BloodLust1121 1 year ago
@BloodLust1121 its to deliver a large amount of fluids in a short period of timeto replace blood for trauma patients that have lost a lot of blood, and for medication administration, that vein is a huge vein so you can get a liter of fluid in their in a matter of minutes, also if you can't obtain IV access anywhere else this can be another option.
lordice123 1 year ago
good job
slacker361 1 year ago
Comment removed
rhylovesjb 2 years ago