Guest guest Posted April 15, 2005 Report Share Posted April 15, 2005 Hi , If you are going to be getting Rocephin, then you will have a Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter (PICC). I think I've mentioned to you before my concern about your PICC placement method. I don't know how they do things in California, but here in New York a good, specially trained IV nurse can insert the PICC, using the anatomic landmark method, usually in a hospital or sometimes in a doctor's office. After that is done, before the first infusion, the patient usually has to have to have a single chest x-ray to make sure it's in the right place. Usually it's in the right place. But sometimes a PICC will curl up inside the vein or even go up into the neck. If the x-ray shows the catheter isn't in correctly, they'll probably pull it out and then they might send you to radiology so a surgeon can accurately place the PICC using fluoroscopy. I'm writing to you about this so you can think about it ahead of time, and decide what you would do. Here's a BMJ article (and very interesting reader responses) that discusses fluoroscopy, among other x-ray techniques. http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/327/7411/371 In this study, 130 physicians in the U.K. were asked to estimate the radiation dose received in a chest x-ray. Not one of them came close! Furthermore, only 6% of them knew that a CT scan of the abdomen involves 400 times the amount of radiation exposure as a chest x-ray. Not one of them (and this included radiologists) knew that an arteriogram of the leg involves 400 times the amount of radiation. When they were asked about Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the abdomen, knee and spine, 8% erroneously believed that MRIs involve radiation. (I believe the people on this list would have done better than those doctors.) Finally, 5% thought that an ultrasound of the abdomen involves radiation. The 130 physicians who filled out questionnaires on this topic were 40 senior house officers, 40 specialist registrars, 40 consultants, or 10 consultant radiologists. Yes, consultant radiologists. So who knows how much IR you would get during a ten- or fifteen-minute fluoroscopy for PICC placement? Is it 400 times the radiation in a chest x-ray? I queried radiologists at a question-answering website, and no one answered. THE GOOD NEWS There is a safer way--ultrasound-guided placement. The August 16, 2003 British Medical Journal has a meta-analysis of ultrasonic locating devices for central venous cannulation. http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/327/7411/361 The study found that catheterisation under two dimensional ultrasound guidance is quicker and safer than the landmark method (used by nurses) in both adults and children. It also concluded that two dimensional ultrasound guidance is more effective than Doppler ultrasound guidance for more difficult procedures. So, , I hope you can google around and call around and find a hospital that uses 2D ultrasound for PICC placement. I don't know anyone who has used it and I have no idea how common 2D ultrasound placement is, but it might be worth the trouble for you to find out, in terms of your long-term health. Or if you have your PICC placed by the landmark method and they mess up, maybe they could just pull it out and try the other arm before sending you to fluoroscopy. (Pulling it out is not painful.) In any case, I'm delighted by the report from your new doctor. Once you've got the PICC maybe you can push a couple of grams of glutathione into it every day. Medical probably won't pay for GSH, but they'll pay for the PICC insertion and nursing care, so you might as well get double use from it. The GSH in itself might do wonders for you. I have a friend with breast cancer who got IV GSH along with her chemotherapy. I don't know if any Lyme doctors are using it with antibiotics now, but I wouldn't be surprised. Sue , Upstate New York Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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