Umbilical venous catheters

Changed by Mark Thurston, 11 Nov 2017

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

Umbilical venous catheters are commonly used in the neonatal period for vascular access, and should be carefully assessed for position on all neonatal films. 

Position

An umbilical venous catheter generally passes directly superiorly and remains relatively anterior in the abdomen. It passes through the umbilicus, umbilical vein, left portal vein, ductus venosus, middle or left hepatic vein, and into the inferior vena cava

The tip should lie at the junction of the inferior vena cava with the right atrium.

Anomalous positioning

Anomalous positioning of the umbilical venous catheters is quite frequent. The catheters are inserted by the paediatrician without imaging guidance, and given the small size of infants (especially those requiring umbilical catheters), a small variation in length of catheter can result in significant malpositioning (too long). Alternatively the catheter may not travel along the intended route (wrong turn). 

Too long

If the umbilical venous catheter is advanced too far along its intended course, the tip may end up in a number of locations:

  1. left atrium and beyond (through a patent foramen ovale or an atrial septal defect)
    • pulmonary vein
    • left ventricle
  2. right atrium and beyond
    1. superior vena cava
    2. right ventricle 
Wrong turn

If the umbilical venous catheter reaches the left portal vein but does not continue into the ductus venosus, the catheter can travel left into the more peripheral left portal vein or right, where it can eventually course into the right portal vein or hepatofugally into the main portal vein (or potentially farther into the vessels that merge to form the portal vein: the superior mesenteric and splenic veins). Malpositioning within the portal venous system is associated with portal vein thrombosis

Complications

Some complications can occur in a well positioned catheter. The most common of these is formation of thrombus along the catheter. 

Malpositioned catheters may result in structural injury including:

  • hepatic haematoma from perforation of an intrahepatic vascular wall
  • pericardiac haematoma from perforation of the right or left atrial wall 

See also

  • -<p><strong>Umbilical venous catheters</strong> are commonly used in the neonatal period for vascular access, and should be carefully assessed for position on all neonatal films. </p><h4>Position</h4><p>An umbilical venous catheter generally passes directly superiorly and remains relatively anterior in the abdomen. It passes through the umbilicus, <a href="/articles/umbilical-vein">umbilical vein</a>, left portal vein, <a href="/articles/ductus-venosus">ductus venosus</a>, middle or left <a href="/articles/hepatic-veins">hepatic vein</a>, and into the <a href="/articles/inferior-vena-cava-1">inferior vena cava</a>. </p><p>The tip should lie at the junction of the <a href="/articles/inferior-vena-cava-1">inferior vena cava</a> with the <a href="/articles/right-atrium">right atrium</a>.</p><h4>Anomalous positioning</h4><p>Anomalous positioning of the umbilical venous catheters is quite frequent. The catheters are inserted by the paediatrician without imaging guidance, and given the small size of infants (especially those requiring umbilical catheters) a small variation in length of catheter can result in significant malpositioning (too long). Alternatively the catheter may not travel along the intended route (wrong turn). </p><h5>Too long</h5><p>If the umbilical venous catheter is advanced too far along its intended course, the tip may end up in a number of locations:</p><ol>
  • -<li>left atrium and beyond (through a patent foramen ovale or an atrial septal defect)<ul>
  • +<p><strong>Umbilical venous catheters</strong> are commonly used in the neonatal period for vascular access and should be carefully assessed for position on all neonatal films. </p><h4>Position</h4><p>An umbilical venous catheter generally passes directly superiorly and remains relatively anterior in the abdomen. It passes through the umbilicus, <a href="/articles/umbilical-vein">umbilical vein</a>, left portal vein, <a href="/articles/ductus-venosus">ductus venosus</a>, middle or left <a href="/articles/hepatic-veins">hepatic vein</a>, and into the <a href="/articles/inferior-vena-cava-1">inferior vena cava</a>. </p><p>The tip should lie at the junction of the <a href="/articles/inferior-vena-cava-1">inferior vena cava</a> with the <a href="/articles/right-atrium">right atrium</a>.</p><h4>Anomalous positioning</h4><p>Anomalous positioning of the umbilical venous catheters is quite frequent. The catheters are inserted by the paediatrician without imaging guidance, and given the small size of infants (especially those requiring umbilical catheters), a small variation in length of catheter can result in significant malpositioning (too long). Alternatively the catheter may not travel along the intended route (wrong turn). </p><h5>Too long</h5><p>If the umbilical venous catheter is advanced too far along its intended course, the tip may end up in a number of locations:</p><ol>
  • +<li>left atrium and beyond (through a <a title="Patent foramen ovale" href="/articles/patent-foramen-ovale">patent foramen ovale</a> or an <a title="Atrial septal defect" href="/articles/atrial-septal-defect-2">atrial septal defect</a>)<ul>

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