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Overview

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Indications, Considerations and Contraindications

3:36

IO Needle Placement Using an Intraosseous Drill

9:10

Summary

Intraosseous Needle Placement

Source: Julianna Jung, MD, FACEP, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Maryland, USA

For unstable patients requiring urgent administration of medications, fluids, or blood products, establishing vascular access quickly is essential. However, there are many factors that can complicate placement of a peripheral intravenous cannula (PIV), and it is extremely common for PIV attempts to fail. PIV placement may be technically challenging in small children, injection drug users, obese people, people with chronic illnesses necessitating frequent vascular access, and in those with burns and other skin conditions. Furthermore, for patients in shock, blood is shunted away from the periphery in order to compensate for impaired perfusion of vital organs, making peripheral vessels difficult to find and cannulate. In these situations, intraosseous (IO) needle placement is an extremely effective alternative to PIV placement, allowing rapid and technically straightforward access to the highly vascularized intramedullary space inside the long bones. From here, medications and fluids are readily absorbed into the bloodstream, permitting stabilization of critically ill patients.

1. Choose a location for IO needle placement.

  1. Location options include:
    1. Proximal tibia: on the medial (flat) side of the tibia at the level of the tibial tuberosity, 3 cm distal to the inferior border of the patella (1-2 cm in infants/children).
    2. Distal tibia: on the medial (flat) side of the tibia, 3 cm proximal to the medial malleolus (1-2 cm in infants/children).
    3. Proximal humerus: on the most prominent aspect of the greater tubercle, 1-2 cm proximal to the surgical neck.

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The ability to quickly establish vascular access can mean the difference between life and death for critically ill patients. In cases where traditional intravenous access cannot be secured, IO access is a rapid, safe, and effective alternative. Fluids, blood products, and medications are readily bioavailable when infused into the intramedullary space inside of the long bones. The commercial availability of IO drills has made this traditional pediatric procedure feasible for patients of all ages. It is a technically simpl

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