CVC Types & Clinical Indications

Central venous catheters (CVCs) provide direct access to the central venous circulation. Site and type selection must balance clinical need, patient anatomy, infection risk, and expected duration of therapy.
📋 CVC Type Comparison
Type Sites Duration Primary Indications Key Points
Non-tunnelled CVC IJV, SCV, Femoral Short-term (<14 days) ICU hemodynamic monitoring, rapid drug/fluid delivery, vasopressors, emergency access Highest infection risk per day; IJV/SCV preferred over femoral
Tunnelled CVC
(Hickman, Broviac)
SCV via tunnel Long-term (months–years) Chemotherapy, TPN, long-term antibiotics, haematology, bone marrow transplant Dacron cuff promotes tissue ingrowth; lower infection risk than non-tunnelled
PICC
(Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter)
Basilic, cephalic, brachial vein → SVC >6 days IV therapy Prolonged IV antibiotics, irritant drugs (vancomycin, amiodarone), TPN, vesicants Inserted at bedside/IR; CXR confirmation mandatory; avoid if ESRD (preserve veins)
Implanted Port SCV / IJV Years (intermittent use) Oncology — chemotherapy, blood products; long-term intermittent therapy Access only with non-coring (Huber) needle; lowest infection rate; highest cost
Introducer Sheath
(Cordis)
IJV, Femoral Short-term Rapid volume replacement (large bore), pulmonary artery catheter insertion, cardiac procedures Large calibre (8–9Fr); significant haemorrhage risk if dislodged
Dialysis Catheter
Acute / Permcath
IJV, Femoral (acute); SCV (Permcath) Acute: Days–weeks
Permcath: Long-term
Acute kidney injury, CRRT in ICU; chronic HD when AVF not available Dual-lumen; high flow required (200–400 ml/min); NEVER use for other medications without dialysis team approval
📍 Site Selection: Pros & Cons

Internal Jugular Vein (IJV)

  • Preferred for non-tunnelled CVC in ICU
  • US guidance reduces complication rate
  • Avoid in coagulopathy (compressible site)

Subclavian Vein (SCV)

  • Lowest CLABSI risk of all sites
  • Not compressible — avoid in coagulopathy
  • Risk: pneumothorax, subclavian artery puncture

Femoral Vein

  • Easiest access in emergency/arrest
  • Highest CLABSI and DVT risk
  • Avoid in ambulatory patients
  • Avoid if suspected abdominal/IVC pathology
📈 CVP Monitoring
CVP is a trend indicator, not an isolated value. Always interpret in clinical context (respiratory status, ventilation, cardiac function).
Normal CVP range2–8 mmHg
Low CVP (<2 mmHg)Hypovolaemia, vasodilation
Elevated CVP (>12 mmHg)RHF, cardiac tamponade, PEEP effect, fluid overload
CVP waveforma, c, x, v, y waves
Zeroing referencePhlebostatic axis (4th ICS, MAL)
Transducer positionLevel with phlebostatic axis
💡 A fluid challenge response (CVP rise <2 mmHg) is more clinically useful than absolute CVP in guiding fluid therapy.
🔧 Lumen Assignment (Triple-Lumen CVC)

Each lumen of a multi-lumen CVC should have a dedicated purpose. Consistent assignment reduces contamination risk and drug interactions.

Distal Lumen
📈
CVP monitoring
Vasoactive drugs
(noradrenaline, vasopressin)
Blood sampling
Medial Lumen
💧
IV fluid administration
Blood / blood products
Rapid infusions
Proximal Lumen
💊
Routine medications
TPN / lipid infusions
Antibiotics
TPN should have a dedicated lumen (proximal preferred). Never administer blood products and TPN through the same lumen simultaneously. Document lumen assignment on the CVC dressing label.

Insertion Assistance — Nursing Role

The nurse is a critical safety partner during CVC insertion. Your role includes patient preparation, maintaining sterile field, monitoring patient status, and ensuring procedural documentation.
📄 Pre-Insertion Checklist
👤 Patient Positioning

IJV / SCV Insertion

  • Trendelenburg position (15–30° head-down)
  • Distends neck/subclavian veins — easier cannulation
  • Reduces air embolism risk during insertion
  • Head turned away from insertion site (IJV)
  • Roll under shoulders for SCV access

Femoral Vein Insertion

  • Supine, flat or slight reverse Trendelenburg
  • Leg slightly abducted and externally rotated
  • Landmark: 2 cm medial to femoral artery, 2 cm below inguinal ligament

PICC Insertion

  • Supine, arm abducted 90° on arm board
  • Turn head towards insertion side during advancement to prevent malposition into IJV
Maximum Sterile Barrier (MSB) Precautions
🚫 MSB precautions are mandatory for ALL central line insertions. Failure to comply is the single biggest preventable cause of CLABSI.
📸 Post-Insertion Verification
  • CXR mandatory before use (except femoral)
  • Tip position: cavoatrial junction (lower 1/3 SVC)
  • Confirm absence of pneumothorax
  • Check line position: no loops, kinks, malposition
  • Aspirate blood return from all lumens
  • Flush all lumens with 10ml 0.9% NaCl
  • Apply sterile dressing with CHG disc
  • Label dressing with: date, site, clinician, lumen assignment

CXR Tip Position Assessment

Optimal: Tip at cavoatrial junction — lower 1/3 of SVC, 2–3 cm above RA. The tip should parallel the vessel wall (not transverse).
Do NOT use line if tip in RA/RV (arrhythmia risk), in IJV, in wrong vessel, or pneumothorax present.
Insertion Complications — Recognition
Pneumothorax
Sudden dyspnoea, decreased breath sounds, hypoxia, tracheal deviation (tension). Confirm CXR. Needle/chest drain decompression.
Arterial Puncture
Bright red pulsatile blood, haematoma. Remove immediately. Apply firm pressure 10 min. Surgical review if expanding.
Air Embolism
Sudden dyspnoea, hypoxia, hypotension, mill-wheel murmur. Head-down left lateral decubitus, high-flow O2, aspirate from distal port.
Arrhythmias
Guidewire/catheter tip in RA/RV. Pull back 2–3 cm. Usually self-limiting. Have defibrillator ready.
Haematoma / Haemothorax
More common with coagulopathy. Monitor vitals, CXR, consider drain.
📄 Insertion Documentation Requirements (JCI)
Line Details
  • Date & time of insertion
  • Site (IJV, SCV, femoral — R/L)
  • Type and brand of catheter
  • Number of lumens
  • Gauge and length (cm at skin)
Procedure
  • Inserting clinician name & grade
  • US guidance used (Y/N)
  • Number of attempts
  • MSB precautions confirmed
  • CHG skin prep confirmed
Verification
  • CXR result and tip position
  • Blood aspirated from all lumens
  • Dressing type applied
  • Lumen assignment documented
  • Patient tolerance

CLABSI Prevention Bundle

CLABSI (Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infection) is a leading cause of preventable ICU mortality. Implementing the complete bundle reduces CLABSI rates by up to 66%. Every element matters — partial compliance is insufficient.
📋 IHI Central Line Bundle — 5 Core Elements

Tick each element to track bundle compliance. State saved locally.

Bundle compliance: 0/5 elements confirmed today.
🩹 Dressing Management

Transparent Semipermeable Dressing (TSM)

  • Change every 7 days (routine)
  • Change immediately if soiled, wet, or lifting
  • Do NOT change within 24h of insertion unless contaminated
  • Use sterile technique for all dressing changes

Gauze Dressing

  • Change every 2 days
  • Use if patient is diaphoretic or site oozing
  • Switch to TSM once site stabilised

CHG-Impregnated Disc (BioPatch / Biopatch)

  • Place at insertion site under dressing
  • Change with each dressing change
  • CHG side facing skin (printed side up)
  • Reduces CLABSI rate by additional 60%
Write insertion date, dressing change date, and nurse initials on dressing label.
💉 Needleless Connector Care
🚫 The hub/connector is the most common entry point for CLABSI organisms. Decontaminate EVERY TIME.

Disinfection Protocol ("Scrub the Hub")

  • 15-second vigorous scrub with 70% isopropyl alcohol wipe
  • Allow 15 seconds to dry completely before access
  • Applies to EVERY access, without exception
  • Use single-use alcohol swab pad — discard after one use

Connector Change Schedule

  • Change every 72–96 hours (per facility policy)
  • Change immediately after blood transfusion
  • Change immediately after TPN administration
  • Change if contamination suspected
  • Change when tubing changed

Blood Sampling via CVC

  • Discard 5–10 ml blood before sampling
  • Flush with 10 ml 0.9% NaCl immediately after
  • Disinfect hub before and after
  • Avoid sampling from TPN lumen if possible
📅 Line Days Counter — Necessity Review Tool

Enter the CVC insertion date to calculate line days and trigger necessity review.

💉 Infusion Management
Infusion TypeTubing Change FrequencySpecial Notes
Standard IV fluidsEvery 96 hours (4 days)Change earlier if product changed or contamination suspected
Blood / blood productsAfter every unit (within 4h)Do NOT transfuse blood >4h after spiking
TPN (with lipid)Every 24 hoursDedicated lumen; never add medications to TPN bag
Lipid emulsions aloneEvery 12 hoursSupports rapid microbial growth
Propofol infusionsEvery 6–12 hoursChange with each vial change; lipid vehicle
Vasopressors / inotropesEvery 24 hoursConcurrent change to minimise hypotension risk

Troubleshooting & Complications

🚫 Catheter Occlusion Management

Assessment

  • Unable to aspirate blood (withdraw occlusion)
  • Resistance to flushing (push occlusion)
  • Sluggish flow / infusion pump alarming
  • Check: kinked tubing, patient position, clamp status first

Types of Occlusion

Thrombotic Occlusion
Most common. Blood clot at tip or within lumen. Resistance/inability to aspirate. Confirmed when mechanical causes excluded.
Drug Precipitate
Incompatible drugs mixed in lumen (e.g., phenytoin + dextrose, ceftriaxone + calcium). Crystal deposition.
Lipid Residue
Lipid buildup from TPN/propofol. White waxy occlusion.

Treatment Protocols

Thrombotic: Alteplase (tPA)
  • Alteplase 2 mg in 2 ml
  • Instil into occluded lumen
  • Dwell time: 30–60 minutes
  • Aspirate 5 ml blood before flushing
  • Repeat dose if no response at 120 min
  • Requires physician order
Acid Precipitate (low pH drug)
  • Sodium bicarbonate 1 mEq/ml
  • Dwell 20–60 minutes
  • Caused by: ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, hydrocortisone
Alkaline Precipitate (high pH drug)
  • 0.1 N Hydrochloric acid (HCl) 1 ml
  • Dwell 20–60 min
  • Caused by: phenytoin, vancomycin, calcium-phosphate
🦯 Air Embolism — Emergency Protocol
Potentially fatal. Act immediately.

Recognition

  • Sudden dyspnoea and hypoxia
  • Hypotension, tachycardia, cyanosis
  • Mill-wheel murmur (churning cardiac sound)
  • Altered consciousness, cardiovascular collapse

Immediate Management

  • Step 1: Clamp all open lumens immediately
  • Step 2: Left lateral decubitus (Durant's manoeuvre) + Trendelenburg (head-down) — traps air in right atrium apex
  • Step 3: High-flow O2 (100% — promotes air reabsorption)
  • Step 4: Aspirate air via distal CVC port (aspirate 20ml)
  • Step 5: Call resuscitation team; prepare for CPR
  • Step 6: Document, incident report, monitor

Prevention

  • Trendelenburg during insertion/removal
  • Cap all ports when not in use
  • Valsalva manoeuvre during guidewire exchange
  • Occlusive dressing immediately after removal
🧸 CLABSI — Recognition & Response

Suspect CLABSI When:

  • Temperature >38.3°C or <36°C in patient with CVC
  • New chills or rigors during/after line access
  • Erythema, warmth, purulence at insertion site
  • Positive blood culture with no other source
  • Clinical deterioration without other explanation

CLABSI Workup

  • 2 sets blood cultures: 1 peripheral + 1 via CVC
  • Simultaneous draw (within 15 min) for DTP (differential time to positivity)
  • CXR, full sepsis workup
  • Swab insertion site if purulent
  • Notify physician — treat as sepsis

Line Removal Decision

  • S. aureus, Candida, Gram-negative rods: REMOVE immediately
  • CoNS (Staph. epi): may attempt salvage in tunnelled/port
  • Send catheter tip culture if removed (5 cm tip in dry container)
📋 Line Removal Technique

Procedure

  • Verify physician order for removal
  • Position patient supine (Trendelenburg for IJV/SCV)
  • Clamp all infusions running through line
  • Remove dressing carefully; inspect insertion site
  • Put on sterile gloves
  • Withdraw catheter smoothly and slowly
  • Apply firm pressure with sterile gauze for minimum 5 minutes (longer if coagulopathic)
  • Apply occlusive petroleum gauze dressing (prevents air embolism via tract)
  • Leave occlusive dressing in place 24–72 hours
  • If infection suspected: cut 5 cm distal tip with sterile scissors, send in sterile dry container for semi-quantitative culture

Post-Removal Monitoring

  • Inspect site at 24h for haematoma/bleeding
  • Monitor for signs of air embolism (first 30 min)
  • Document: time of removal, condition of site, reason for removal, catheter tip sent (Y/N)
  • Count catheter lumens vs. number expected
NEVER remove a CVC against resistance — risk of catheter fracture/embolisation. Seek senior advice.

Catheter Removal Criteria

  • No longer clinically indicated
  • CLABSI / confirmed line infection
  • Mechanical failure (fracture, kink, complete occlusion)
  • Line days >14 days non-tunnelled (site rotation)
  • Accidental displacement/malposition
📈 CVP Waveform Interpretation

The CVP waveform reflects right atrial mechanical events. Abnormalities indicate cardiac pathology.

a
Atrial Contraction
Right atrial contraction at end of diastole. Follows P wave on ECG. Absent in AF. Giant a-wave: tricuspid stenosis, severe RHF.
c
Tricuspid Closure
Tricuspid valve closure and early isovolumetric contraction. Small wave. Follows QRS. Often not clearly visible.
x
Atrial Relaxation
Downstroke — atrial relaxation and tricuspid valve descent during ventricular systole. Blunted/absent in tamponade (x descent).
v
Venous Filling
Passive atrial filling while tricuspid valve is closed (late systole). Giant v-wave: tricuspid regurgitation.
y
Ventricular Filling
Tricuspid opens → RA empties into RV. Blunted y descent: tricuspid stenosis, tamponade. Deep y: constrictive pericarditis.
💡 Cannon a-waves (large, irregular): complete heart block or junctional rhythm — RA contracts against closed tricuspid valve. Report to physician immediately.

Documentation, Audit & Quiz

📄 Daily Line Review — Documentation Template

JCI requires daily documented review of all central lines. Use this template in nursing notes.

Date/Time: ________________
CVC Site: [ ] IJV-R [ ] IJV-L [ ] SCV-R [ ] SCV-L [ ] Femoral-R [ ] Femoral-L
Insertion Date: _____________ Line Days: ______
Dressing intact/clean/dry: [ ] Yes [ ] No → Changed today: [ ] Yes [ ] No
Insertion site: [ ] No redness [ ] Erythema [ ] Purulence [ ] Induration
All lumens patent: [ ] Yes [ ] No (document occlusion management)
CHG disc in place: [ ] Yes [ ] No [ ] Changed today
Line still clinically indicated: [ ] Yes [ ] No → Remove today: [ ] Yes
Physician review of necessity: [ ] Confirmed [ ] Pending
Bundle compliance (5 elements): [ ] Complete [ ] Incomplete → Action: ______
Nurse signature: ________________
📊 CLABSI Rate Calculation
CLABSI rate is expressed per 1,000 central line days (CLD). This is the international standard metric for ICU infection surveillance.
CLABSI Rate Formula
CLABSI Rate = (CLABSI events ÷ Central Line Days) × 1,000
GCC / National Target<1 per 1,000 line-days
International benchmark (top decile ICU)<0.5 per 1,000 line-days
Central line days countedEach calendar day with any CVC in situ
Insertion day counts asDay 1
Reporting periodMonthly (minimum)
Example: 2 CLABSIs in a month with 400 central line days = (2/400) × 1000 = 5 per 1,000 line-days — above GCC target.
📋 Bundle Compliance Audit Tool

Use for shift audit. Record Yes/No compliance for each element. Score automatically calculated.

Hand hygiene performed before line access
Line access performed with sterile non-touch technique
Hub disinfected ("scrub the hub") for 15 seconds before each access
Dressing intact, clean, dry and dated
CHG disc present and in-date at insertion site
All unused lumens capped with sterile caps
Tubing change performed as per schedule
Daily necessity review documented in nursing notes
Audit score: Complete the checklist above.
Quick Reference Card

Flush Volumes

Pre-access flush10 ml 0.9% NaCl
Post-medication flush10 ml 0.9% NaCl
Post-blood sampling10–20 ml 0.9% NaCl
Heparin lock (if used)3–5 ml (10–100 U/ml)
tPA discard after dwell5 ml before flush

Change Frequencies

TSM dressingEvery 7 days
Gauze dressingEvery 2 days
CHG discWith each dressing change
IV tubing (standard)Every 96h
TPN tubingEvery 24h
Needleless connectorEvery 72–96h
Blood tubingPer unit / within 4h

Lumen Assignment

Distal (brown/marked)CVP / Vasopressors
Medial (white)Fluids / Blood products
Proximal (blue)Medications / TPN
TPN — dedicated lumenProximal preferred

Key Thresholds

CVP normal2–8 mmHg
Review necessity after24h (daily)
CLABSI target (GCC)<1/1000 line-days
Hub scrub time15 sec + 15 sec dry
CHG prep scrub time30 sec + 30 sec dry
Alteplase dwell30–60 min
🧠 Knowledge Assessment Quiz — 10 Questions

Test your central line knowledge. Select one answer per question, then click Submit Quiz.

1. What is the GCC/national benchmark target for CLABSI rate?

2. Which CVC insertion site carries the LOWEST CLABSI risk?

3. How long should you scrub the hub of a needleless connector before accessing a CVC?

4. A non-tunnelled CVC is confirmed on CXR with the tip in the right ventricle. What is the FIRST action?

5. Which patient position is recommended for SCV/IJV CVC insertion to reduce air embolism risk?

6. Alteplase (tPA) 2mg/2ml is instilled into an occluded CVC lumen. What is the correct dwell time?

7. A patient with a femoral CVC develops a sudden fever of 39°C, rigors, and hypotension. Blood cultures are drawn. Which organisms require IMMEDIATE line removal?

8. How frequently should a transparent semipermeable membrane (TSM) dressing be routinely changed?

9. A patient suddenly develops dyspnoea, hypotension, and a mill-wheel cardiac murmur while the nurse is changing CVC tubing. What is the MOST appropriate IMMEDIATE action?

10. Which of the following is NOT one of the 5 IHI Central Line Bundle elements?