Due to their tiny veins and high risk of vasospasm during catheterization, pediatric patients are more likely to experience postprocedural RAO. Subcutaneous nitroglycerin prevents vasospasm and boosts the success rate of radial artery catheterization, although it is uncertain how it affects the prevention of RAO following catheter removal. Thus, this study assessed the safety and effectiveness of subcutaneous nitroglycerin in preventing RAO.
Pediatric patients under the age of 3 who needed radial artery catheterization during general anesthesia were enrolled in this clinical research, which was carried out at a single tertiary facility. Subcutaneous nitroglycerin (5 μg/kg/0.5 mL) or normal saline (0.5 mL) above the selected radial artery was administered randomly to patients prior to radial arterial catheterization and catheter removal under ultrasound supervision. The reverse Barbeau test with pulse oximetry on the ipsilateral index finger was used to measure the RAO incidence following catheter removal, which was the main result.
Almost, 68 of the 200 pediatric patients that were originally enrolled were removed due to procedural infractions. RAO incidence was lower in the nitroglycerin group than in the control group (25.4% [17 of 67] vs. 73.8% [48 of 65]; P <.001; odds ratio [OR], 0.12; 95% CI, 0.06-0.26; absolute risk reduction, 48.5%; 95% CI, 33.6%-63.4%) in the per-protocol analysis, which included 132 participants (median [IQR] age, 5.5 [2.0-16.6] months; 73 female [55.3%]).
The nitroglycerin group outperformed the control group in terms of the radial artery's perfusion index (mean [SD], 1.37 [1.09] vs 0.65 [0.49]; 95% CI for mean difference, 0.43-1.01; P <.001) and peak blood flow velocity (mean [SD], 13.0 [11.0] cm/s vs 7.4 [9.2] cm/s; 95% CI for mean difference, 2.1-9.1 cm/s; P =.002) following catheter removal. The RAO duration did not significantly differ across groups. There were no localized side effects or hypotension.
Overall, the findings of this randomized clinical trial highlights that in pediatric patients under 3 years old, subcutaneous nitroglycerin injection prior to radial artery catheterization and catheter removal reduced the incidence of RAO following catheter removal.
Source:
Park, J.-B., Ji, S.-H., Kim, E.-H., Lee, J.-H., Kim, H.-S., Kim, J.-T., & Jang, Y.-E. (2025). Subcutaneous nitroglycerin to prevent radial artery occlusion in pediatric patients: A randomized clinical trial: A randomized clinical trial. JAMA Pediatrics. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.3652
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