# Enhancing tube feeding method for neurosurgery: the application of improved PICC technique

**Authors:** Huiwen Wu, Yuru Qiu, Yucui Wang, Jiarong Li, Yihong Qiu

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40001-024-01729-3 · European Journal of Medical Research · 2024-02-17

## TL;DR

This study introduces an improved PICC catheterization method for neurosurgery patients that avoids head position changes, reducing risks like brain herniation and improving success rates.

## Contribution

A novel PICC catheterization method using intracavitary electrocardiographic guidance without changing head positions is introduced.

## Key findings

- The IECG-IBP group showed 91.78% distinct P wave amplitude, significantly higher than the conventional group.
- The IECG-IBP method reduced catheter tip misplacement rates to 5.47%, compared to 11.54% in the conventional group.
- The IECG-IBP method improved outcomes without increasing neck resistance or symptoms like headache and dizziness.

## Abstract

Peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) used in neurosurgical patients requires changes in patients' head positions. However, such changes can worsen pressure on the brain tissue, lead to sudden acute brain herniation and respiratory arrest, resulting in a higher chance of patient death. This paper addresses the aforementioned problems by introducing a new PICC catheterization method.

In a retrospective study, the records of patients with PICC from April 2020 to April 2023 were reviewed, and they were divided into three groups based on the methods employed. The first group as the conventional group, involved changing patients’ body positions during catheterization. The second group, as the intracavitary electrocardiographic (IECG) group, utilized intracavitary electrocardiographic monitoring and involved changing patients’ body positions during catheterization. The third group as the intracavitary electrocardiographic with improved body positioning (IECG-IBP) group, catheterization was performed with guidance from intracavitary electrocardiographs and without changing the patients’ body positions. The ECG changes among patients undergoing different catheter delivery methods were then compared, as well as the rate of catheter tip misplacement.

The study encompassed a total of 354 cases. Our findings reveal distinct P wave amplitude percentages among the groups: 0% in the conventional group, 88.46% in the IECG group, and 91.78% in the IECG-IBP group. Furthermore, the following catheter tip misplacement rates were recorded: 11.54% for the conventional group, 5.39% for the IECG group, and 5.47% for the IECG-IBP group. Significantly notable differences were observed in these two key indicators between the conventional group and the IECG-IBP group. Notably, the IECG-IBP group demonstrated a more favorable outcome compared to the IECG group.

In patients with neurosurgical diseases, especially those with tracheostomy and nuchal stiffness, the IECG-IBP PICC catheter insertion method can effectively reduce the patient's neck resistance, does not increase the patient's headache and dizziness symptoms, and does not reduce the success of one-time catheterization. Rate and does not increase the incidence of jugular venous ectopia.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neurosurgical diseases (MESH:D004194), dizziness (MESH:D004244), brain herniation (MESH:D001927), respiratory arrest (MESH:D012131), headache (MESH:D006261), death (MESH:D003643), jugular venous ectopia (MESH:C563268)
- **Chemicals:** IBP (MESH:C009897)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10873980/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10873980