Tumgik
#IntraosseousInfusion treatmentdevices
sayalibhokare · 3 years
Text
Things you may not know about Intraosseous Infusion
Tumblr media
The idea of administering drugs and fluids through the medullary (marrow) chamber of a bone dates back to the 1920s when adults with pernicious anaemia were transfused through their sternum. The medullary cavity in long bones is made up of a network of venous sinusoids. These sinusoids drain into massive medullary venous channels, which lead to nutrition or emissary venous systems. The nutrition foramina allow these arteries to escape the bone and empty directly into the systemic venous circulation. Intraosseous cannulation fell out of favour as intravascular technology and surgical procedures advanced, and by the 1950s, alternate access routes had largely replaced it.
Although a publication suggests that intraosseous infusion in critically sick patients does not need to be done in a bone with a medullary cavity, this is not a generally recognised practice. When IV access is unavailable, the intraosseous infusion is a viable alternative in emergency medicine. The practice of injecting straight into the marrow of the bone is known as an intraosseous infusion.
read more @ https://sailee097.blogspot.com/2021/08/things-you-should-know-about.html
0 notes