I don't remember when he actually got used to it but we are grateful he doesn't need it any longer. When the lines hung, they ended at his waist. At COH, they had a special clip that attached it, coiled, to the collar of his shirt. When Steven was discharged, they showed us how to coil it and tape to his chest. That worked until his hair started growing in :) So instead of taping it, Steven decided to let it hang. What a great idea until a nurse thought it had pulled out a little...back to the clip. Who knew?
I was pretty methodical when changing his dressing, 100% Type A. We have a small table that I alcoholed and covered with a clean cloth. After laying all the supplies on the table, each item was prepared (air out of syringes, containers opened, etc...).
The disk over the insert point is called a Biopatch. It is imbedded with chlorhexidine (CHG) which continuously suppresses the growth of bacteria on the skin. Without this protection, bacteria will immediately repopulate possibly causing infection.
With the Biopatch removed, you can see the stitches that keep the line from falling out. There is also a "cuff" under the skin inside the insertion point. When they talked about a cuff, I imagined a disk like object because, after all, there has to be something in there keeping it from falling out! At this point, hands are washed and regloved. The area is cleaned with Chloraprep (iodine based) being careful to work from the stitches outward. A thin film of skin prep is wiped where the new dressing will be. A new Biopatch is laid with Tagaderm dressing covering the area. But wait there's more! Now the tips are changed. A tip is removed using alcohol on a gauze pad, more alcohol, a new tip, more alcohol, saline flush, more alcohol, and a heparin flush. Smile and repeat for the second tip. This was a Reader's Digest version but you get the picture.
We had to schedule his Hickman removal...outpatient procedure. I was thrilled to be able to stay and see the procedure. The nurse practitioner explained the procedure, papers were signed, the site was draped/prepped and a local anesthetic was injected around the insertion point. The nurse was explaining that sometimes the lines are hard to get out, especially when they have been in this long.....great. Apparently the catheter can become attached to the wall of the vein (all Steven could think of was the quote from Pirates..."part of the ship...part of the crew"). She picked up a scalpel at one point and I backed away from the table.
Eventually she pulled the mother of all lines out. See the small red area on the catheter? That is the "cuff". Good heavens, not what I expected. It was almost like a piece of gauze. If we had known that was the only thing keeping his line in, I don't think we would have ever let it hang! It was a longer line than we realized. So awesome! The last thing I remember is the nurse using a scalpel...I'm thinking Steven will need stitches. Nope. They put a bandage on it similar to the Tagaderm dressing. It couldn't get wet for 48 hours and then we could take the large dressing off and put on a band-aid. One more step towards normalcy...
Thank God for Type A care-givers! So glad that's out. You guys are troopers.
ReplyDeleteHa ha thank you! Definitely Type A :)
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