Examinando por Materia "Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared"
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Ítem Acceso abierto Effectiveness of infrared light in improving peripheral venous access in pediatric patients with difficult venous access(Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, 2020-01-05) Salas Loayza, Diana; Cardenas Espinoza, Heydi Kuvenka; Basurto Santillán, Ivan JavierObjective: to systematize the available evidence from studies carried out on the effectiveness of the use of infrared light to improve peripheral cannulation in pediatric patients with difficult venous access. material and method: systematic review of scientific articles found effectiveness of the use of infrared light to improve peripheral channel cannulation in pediatric patients with difficult venous access, databases: epistemonikos, cochrane, lilacs, medline pubmed, scielo, and grade evaluation. Results: the articles systematically reviewed were 10% systematic review, 20% systematic review and meta-analysis, 30% randomized clinical trial and 40% randomized controlled trial. The articles reviewed systematically show that 20% of the effectiveness of infrared light exists. 50% did not have the effectiveness of infrared light to improve peripheral channel cannulation, 30% could improve the effectiveness of infrared light. Conclusions: the articles systematically reviewed conclude that 3 of 10 articles show that more studies are required. of evaluation. 2 out of 10 articles show that there is effectiveness in the use of infrared light. It was concluded that 5 of 10 articles show that there is insufficient evidence of the effectiveness of infrared light.Ítem Acceso abierto Effectiveness of the use of infrared and ultrasound vascular image devices in the peripheral venous access channel compared to traditional technique to reduce the number of puncture attempts in pediatric patients(Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, 2019-12-01) Galván Guzman, Emma Zoila; Chacon Yance, Yennys Walkires; Avila Vargas Machuca, Jeannette GiselleObjective: Systematize the evidence on the effectiveness of using infrared vascular imaging devices and ultrasound in peripheral venous access cannulation compared to the traditional technique to reduce the number of puncture attempts in pediatric patients. Material and Methods: Systematic review of 10 scientific articles indexed in databases: Lilacs and PubMed. Analyzed according to the Grade scale. Results: 60% of the evidence agree that the use of these devices improved the success rate of cannulation. Conclusions: 6 out of 10 articles demonstrate the effectiveness of using vascular imaging devices: infrared and ultrasound, while 4 out of 10 articles suggest that they do not outperform the traditional cannulation technique and/or do not present significant results.
