enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Venipuncture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venipuncture

    A 1996 study of blood donors (a larger needle is used in blood donation than in routine venipuncture) found that 1 in 6,300 donors sustained a nerve injury. [5] Risk and side affects can include a variety of things. Dizziness, sweating, and a drop in your heart rate and blood pressure. [6]

  3. Extravasation (intravenous) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extravasation_(intravenous)

    Extravasation is the leakage of intravenously (IV) infused, and potentially damaging, medications into the extravascular tissue around the site of infusion. The leakage can occur through brittle veins in the elderly, through previous venipuncture access, or through direct leakage from wrongly positioned venous access devices.

  4. Cephalic vein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalic_vein

    In human anatomy, the cephalic vein (also called the antecubital vein) [1] is a superficial vein in the arm. It is the longest vein of the upper limb. It starts at the anatomical snuffbox from the radial end of the dorsal venous network of hand, and ascends along the radial (lateral) side of the arm before emptying into the axillary vein.

  5. Bicipital aponeurosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicipital_aponeurosis

    The bicipital aponeurosis is superficial to the brachial artery and the median nerve, but deep to the median cubital vein. This protection is important during venipuncture (taking blood). It is one structure that has to be incised during fasciotomy in the treatment of acute compartment syndrome of the forearm and elbow region. [medical citation ...

  6. New treatment may stop and potentially reverse some nerve ...

    www.aol.com/treatment-may-stop-potentially...

    Existing treatments aim to suppress the immune system to prevent further damage to nerve cells. A new study has developed a treatment that can help regenerate myelin with the potential to stop and ...

  7. Needlestick injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Needlestick_injury

    A study in Hartford, Connecticut found that needlestick injury rates among Hartford police officers decreased after the introduction of a needle exchange program: six injuries in 1,007 drug-related arrests for the 6-month period before vs. two in 1,032 arrests for the 6-month period after. [39]

  8. Italian may regain use of hand after nerve transfer from ...

    www.aol.com/news/italian-may-regain-hand-nerve...

    A man may regain the use of his hand, left paralysed by a severe road accident, thanks to a pioneering nerve transfer operation from his partly amputated leg, doctors in northern Italy said.

  9. Vasa nervorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasa_nervorum

    [3] [4] and has been implicated as the cause in a few cases of facial nerve paralysis. [3] During invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures, injecting a vasoconstrictor close to a nerve can reduce perfusion to its supplying vessel, risking ischemic nerve injury.