Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access

One of the major criticisms of the radial approach is that it takes longer overall procedure and fluoroscopy time, which means not only more staff will be exposed during the procedures, but they will also stand close to the patient where rates of radiation scattered by the patient are higher. The ai...

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Main Authors: Osama Tayeh, Federica Ettori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2014-06-01
Series:The Egyptian Heart Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1110260813000793
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spelling doaj-0f6b19b44ff44b75980d7fb96f2347342020-11-25T01:21:15ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Heart Journal1110-26082014-06-0166214915410.1016/j.ehj.2013.08.003Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral accessOsama Tayeh0Federica Ettori1Critical Care Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, EgyptCardiothoracic Department, Spedali Civili, Brescia University, ItalyOne of the major criticisms of the radial approach is that it takes longer overall procedure and fluoroscopy time, which means not only more staff will be exposed during the procedures, but they will also stand close to the patient where rates of radiation scattered by the patient are higher. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety of the radial versus femoral artery approach in our institution’s routine coronary angiography practice. Methods: All cases of diagnostic coronary angiography (CA) over a 23 month period at a tertiary care hospital were reviewed for this analysis. Procedure duration was calculated as a total in laboratory catheter time. Contrast volume and fluoroscopy time were recorded, as it is correlated to catheter manipulation. Results: Eight hundred patients who underwent a diagnostic CA were included in this study. The radial approach was used in 586 patients (73.25%) and the femoral approach in 214 patients (26.75%). Comparing the radial and femoral approaches, fluoroscopy and procedure times were not significantly different (3.43 ± 1.19 vs 3.86 ± 1.49 min, P = 0.215 and 31.87 ± 9.61 vs 33.24 ± 10.33 min, P = 0.170, respectively). While contrast utilization during the procedure was significantly lower in the radial than the femoral approach (67.63 ± 25.49 vs 81.53 ± 24.80 mL respectively, P = 0.03). Conclusion: Transradial coronary angiography can be safely performed for the patient and the professional staff members as the transfemoral approach.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1110260813000793Coronary angiographyRadialFemoral
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
spellingShingle Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
The Egyptian Heart Journal
Coronary angiography
Radial
Femoral
author_facet Osama Tayeh
Federica Ettori
author_sort Osama Tayeh
title Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
title_short Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
title_full Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
title_fullStr Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
title_full_unstemmed Coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
title_sort coronary angiography safety between radial and femoral access
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Heart Journal
issn 1110-2608
publishDate 2014-06-01
description One of the major criticisms of the radial approach is that it takes longer overall procedure and fluoroscopy time, which means not only more staff will be exposed during the procedures, but they will also stand close to the patient where rates of radiation scattered by the patient are higher. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety of the radial versus femoral artery approach in our institution’s routine coronary angiography practice. Methods: All cases of diagnostic coronary angiography (CA) over a 23 month period at a tertiary care hospital were reviewed for this analysis. Procedure duration was calculated as a total in laboratory catheter time. Contrast volume and fluoroscopy time were recorded, as it is correlated to catheter manipulation. Results: Eight hundred patients who underwent a diagnostic CA were included in this study. The radial approach was used in 586 patients (73.25%) and the femoral approach in 214 patients (26.75%). Comparing the radial and femoral approaches, fluoroscopy and procedure times were not significantly different (3.43 ± 1.19 vs 3.86 ± 1.49 min, P = 0.215 and 31.87 ± 9.61 vs 33.24 ± 10.33 min, P = 0.170, respectively). While contrast utilization during the procedure was significantly lower in the radial than the femoral approach (67.63 ± 25.49 vs 81.53 ± 24.80 mL respectively, P = 0.03). Conclusion: Transradial coronary angiography can be safely performed for the patient and the professional staff members as the transfemoral approach.
topic Coronary angiography
Radial
Femoral
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1110260813000793
work_keys_str_mv AT osamatayeh coronaryangiographysafetybetweenradialandfemoralaccess
AT federicaettori coronaryangiographysafetybetweenradialandfemoralaccess
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