Seldinger technique chest and complication rate

Date First Published:
October 25, 2001
Last Updated:
March 19, 2003
Report by:
Jon Argall, Senior Clinical Fellow in Emergency Medicine (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Joel Desmond, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In [a patient requiring a chest drain after trauma] is [a seldinger 'over-the-wire' technique better than other methods or chest drain placement] at [achieving pneumothorax resolution without complication]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 30 year old man presents to the emergency department after a road traffic accident. On initial assessment you identify a haemothorax/pneumothorax on the left side of his chest; there are no signs of tension. You elect to place a chest drain and discover that you have a seldinger 'over-the-wire' technique chest drain in front of you. You wonder whether this method of placement is be better than any other at achieving succesful management of the injury without complication.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-12/02 using the OVID interface.
Search Details:
[(exp chest tubes OR exp thoracostomy OR "chest drain$".mp) AND ("seldinger".mp OR "needle wire dilator".mp OR "over wire".mp OR "small bore".mp OR pigtail.mp OR "pig tail".mp)]) LIMIT to human AND English.
Outcome:
Altogether 28 papers were found by the Medline search. No papers were directly relevant but 3 papers had some relevance to our clinical question. These are listed in the table.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
The needle-wire-dilator technique for the insertion of chest tubes in pediatric patients. Ahmed MY, Silver P, Nimkoff L, et al. 1995, USA 24 children aged 4 mths to 24yrs from a single pediatric ICU
Drains inserted with deep sedation using size 10 to 20F drains
Retrospective single centre case series Time for insertion 4 to 7 minutes No control group
Retrospective
Different scenario to the emergency department
Complications 5 tubes became kinked, causing 4 pneumothoraces to recur. 2 drains had to be reinserted. Otherwise no major complications
Sclerotherapy for malignant pleural effusions: a prospective randomized trial of bleomycin vs doxycycline with small-bore catheter drainage. Patz EF Jr., McAdams HP, Erasmus JJ, et al. 1998, USA 106 patients having elective insertion of a small-bore catheter for sclerotherapy for malignant pleural effusion.
14F small bore catheter was inserted by seldinger technique, with image guidance
Prospective case series Success of insertion No insertion failures reported Sub-study of a sclerotherapy trial
Not directly relevant to our clinical question
Outcome measures were not defined prior to study
Infections No infections reported
Other complications Pain scores for insertion not done but stated that technique was well tolerated
Efficacy and complications of percutaneous pigtail catheters for thoracostomy in pediatric patients. Roberts JS, Bratton SL, Brogan TV. 1998, USA 133 chest catheters inserted into 91 children in ICU. Age range 0-18yrs. Weight 1.8-66kg
7 to 8.5F percutaneous pigtail catheters inserted in conjunction with wire and dilator by seldinger technique
Retrospective case series Pneumothorax resolution 15 of 20 patients who had drain for pneumothorax had complete resolution (75%) 80% had congenital heart disease
67% intubated
Not directly relevant to the emergency department
Retrospective uncontrolled methodology
Complications Haemothorax (2%) Pneumothorax (2%) Empyema (1%)<br><br>Cannulation of hepatic vein (1 pt)<br><br>Failure to drain pneumothorax (11%)<br><br>Dislogement (5%)<br><br>1/3rd of complications were in infants <5kg
Author Commentary:
There is no comparative work looking at the use of a seldinger technique for placement of chest drains in adult trauma patients. Of the papers that were found uncontrolled series reports document their comparatively safe use in adults and children in well controlled elective and intensive care settings. Complications such as recurrence of the pneumothorax, kinking of the drain do still occur as is seen in the open technique, but insertion complications or difficulties seem to be rare.
Bottom Line:
There is no evidence to show that a seldinger over the wire insertion technique is superior to traditional methods.
References:
  1. Ahmed MY, Silver P, Nimkoff L, et al.. The needle-wire-dilator technique for the insertion of chest tubes in pediatric patients.
  2. Patz EF Jr., McAdams HP, Erasmus JJ, et al.. Sclerotherapy for malignant pleural effusions: a prospective randomized trial of bleomycin vs doxycycline with small-bore catheter drainage.
  3. Roberts JS, Bratton SL, Brogan TV.. Efficacy and complications of percutaneous pigtail catheters for thoracostomy in pediatric patients.