Occurrence of hemorrhagic events related to invasive devices manipulated by nursing in anticoagulated patients

Authors

  • Flavia Giron Camerini
  • Lolita Dopico da Silva
  • Danielle de Mendonça Henrique
  • Karla Biancha Silva Andrade
  • Luana Ferreira de Almeida

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15253/2175-6783.2017000400003

Keywords:

Nursing Care, Hemorrhage, Anticoagulants.

Abstract

Objective: to verify the occurrence of hemorrhagic events related to invasive devices manipulated by nursing in anticoagulated patients. Methods: retrospective cohort study, with analysis of medical records. A total of 867 medical records were investigated, from which a sample of 79 patients who received continuous infusion of sodium heparin was selected. The types of hemorrhagic events and the different invasive devices were submitted to non-parametric statistical treatments and to the association tests. Results: the most common types of hemorrhagic events occurred in the skin (47.4%); puncture site (15.8%); airways (15.8%); genitourinary system (15.8%) and gastrointestinal system (10.5%). Patients with nasoenteral catheters had a 15.8-foldhigher risk of gastrointestinal bleeding (p=0.032). Conclusion: the rate of bleeding events (21.5%) was high, and more frequent in the skin. Patients with nasoenteral catheters have a higher risk of gastrointestinal bleeding and patients with indwelling bladder catheters have a seven-fold increased risk of hematuria.

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Published

2017-09-18

Issue

Section

Letters to the editor

How to Cite

1.
Occurrence of hemorrhagic events related to invasive devices manipulated by nursing in anticoagulated patients. Rev Rene [Internet]. 2017 Sep. 18 [cited 2026 Feb. 6];18(4):437-44. Available from: https://periodicos.ufc.br/rene/article/view/20201