Cannula

For other uses, see Cannula (disambiguation).

A cannula (from Latin "little reed"; plural cannulae or cannulas)[1] is a tube that can be inserted into the body, often for the delivery or removal of fluid or for the gathering of data. In simple terms, a cannula can surround the inner or outer surfaces of a trocar needle thus extending the effective needle length by at least half the length of the original needle.

Decannulation is the permanent removal of a cannula (extubation),[2] especially of a tracheostomy[3] cannula, once a physician determines it is no longer needed for breathing.

Medicine

Cannulae normally come with a trocar attached, which allows puncturing of the body in order to get into the intended space. Many types of cannulae exist:[4]

Intravenous cannulae are the most common in hospital use. A variety of cannulae are used to establish cardiopulmonary bypass in cardiac surgery. A nasal cannula is a piece of plastic tubing that runs under the nose and is used to administer oxygen.

Intravenous (IV) cannulation

Intravenous cannula

A venous cannula is inserted into a vein, primarily for the administration of intravenous fluids, for obtaining blood samples and for administering medicines. An arterial cannula is inserted into an artery, commonly the radial artery, and is used during major operations and in critical care areas to measure beat-to-beat blood pressure and to draw repeated blood samples. Insertion of the venous cannula is a painful procedure that can lead to anxiety and stress. Use of a vapocoolant immediately before cannulation reduces pain during the procedure, without increasing the difficulty of cannulation.[5]

Complications may arise in the vein as a result of the cannulation procedure, the four main groups of complication are:

Nasal cannulation and oral-nasal cannulation

Drawing of a nasal cannula

A nasal cannula or an oral–nasal cannula consists of a flexible tube, usually with multiple short, open-ended branches for comfortable insertion into the nostrils and/or mouth, and may be used for the delivery of a gas (such as pure oxygen), a gas mixture (as, for example, during anesthesia), or to measure airflow into and out of the nose and/or mouth.

Tracheotomy tube

The removal of a tracheotomy tube is referred to as decannulation.[6]

Veterinary use

A cannula is also used in an emergency procedure to relieve pressure and bloating in cattle and sheep due most commonly to their accidentally grazing wilted legume or legume-dominant pastures, particularly alfalfa, ladino, and red and white clover.[7]

They are also a component used in the insertion of the Verichip.

Much larger cannulas are used to research about the digestive system of Cows.

Aesthetic medicine & anti-ageing

In aesthetic medicine, a blunt-tip cannula or microcannula (also called smooth tip microcannula, blunt tipped cannula, or simply microcannula) is a small tube with an edge that is not sharp and an extrusion port or pore near the tip which is designed for atraumatic subdermal injections of fluids or gels.

Depending on the size of the internal diameter, it can be used either for the injection of cosmetic wrinkle fillers like hyaluronic acid, collagen, poly-L-lactic acid, CaHA, etc., or for fat transfer (Liposuction). The advantage of using these is that they are less painful, have less risk of bruising, have less swelling, and a better safety profile. An intravascular injection is more difficult with microcannulas making the risk of blindness when injecting around the eye much safer. Skin necrosis risk is also lowered.[8]

In January 2012, the "Dermasculpt" microcannula was approved by the FDA for use in the United States for use with soft tissue fillers [9] followed by the "Magic Needle", "Softfil," "TSK by Air-Tite," and "Sculpt-face".[10] The primary structural differences between microcannulas is the distance of the extrusion port or pore from the tip (closer is more precise), the bluntness of the tip (tapered blunt tip is easier for entry), and the flexibility of the shaft (enough flexibility to move around sensitive structures but enough rigidity for precise placement.[11]

Since microcannula tips are blunt, a Pilot or Introducer needle is required for entry through the skin and the technique is to thread the microcannula through this tiny opening. Microcannula cosmetic injection techniques have been developed on how to best place cosmetic wrinkle fillers such as the Long MicroCannula Double Cross-Hatched Fan and the Wiggle Progression techniques [12]

Body piercing

Cannulae are used in body piercing when using a standard IV needle (usually between 18GA and 12GA, although may be as large as 0GA, in which case the procedure is known as dermal punching and uses a biopsy punch without a cannula), and for inserting hooks for suspensions.

During piercing, the fistula is created by inserting the needle. The needle is then removed, leaving the cannula in place, which is sometimes trimmed down. The cannula is then removed and sterile jewelry is inserted into the fistula simultaneously, in order to minimise trauma to the fresh fistula caused by insertion of blunt-ended jewelry.

Non-medical use

Air sensitive cannula used in synthetic chemistry.

In biological research, a push-pull cannula, which both withdraws and injects fluid, can be used to determine the effect of a certain chemical on a specific cell. The push part of the cannula is filled with a physiological solution plus the chemical of interest and is then injected slowly into the local cellular environment of a cell. The pull cannula then draws liquid from the extracellular medium, thus measuring the cellular response to the chemical of interest. This technique is especially used for neuroscience.

In general aviation, a cannula refers to a piece of plastic tubing that runs under the nose and is used to administer oxygen in non-pressurized aircraft flying above 10,000 feet above sea level in Canada and above 12,500 feet above sea level in the United States.

In synthetic chemistry, a cannula refers to a piece of stainless steel or plastic tubing used to transfer liquids or gases from one vessel to another without exposure to air. See more at Cannula transfer.

See also

References

  1. cannula Oxford Dictionaries. Retrieved: 2014-09-18.
  2. Children with Tracheotomies Resource Guide, by Marilyn K. Kertoy, page 15 (Google book search)
  3. Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary
  4. Vita Needle - Typical Cannula Points
  5. Griffith, Rebecca J; Jordan, Vanessa; Herd, David; Reed, Peter W; Dalziel, Stuart R (26 April 2016). "Vapocoolants (cold spray) for pain treatment during intravenous cannulation". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (John Wiley & Sons, Ltd). doi:10.1002/14651858.cd009484.pub2/full. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  6. Morris, Linda; Sherif Afifi; M. Sherif Afifi (2010-02-19). Tracheostomies: The Complete Guide. Springer Publishing Company. p. 311. ISBN 978-0-8261-0517-2.
  7. Diseases of the Ruminant Forestomach : Bloat, Merck Veterinary Manual
  8. http://aiam.us/definitions/blunt-tip-microcannula/
  9. Zeichner, J. A.; Cohen, J. L. (2012). "Use of blunt tipped cannulas for soft tissue fillers". Journal of drugs in dermatology : JDD 11 (1): 70–72. PMID 22206080.
  10. http://www.sculpt-face.com
  11. Garry R. Lee, MD| title = Advanced Anti-Bruising Cosmetic Filler Techniques| journal = PRiME: International Journal of Aesthetic and Anti-Ageing Medicine. January/February 2015 | pages = 25-34 | year = 2015
  12. Garry R. Lee, MD| title = Advanced Anti-Bruising Cosmetic Filler Techniques| journal = PRiME: International Journal of Aesthetic and Anti-Ageing Medicine. January/February 2015 | pages = 25-34 | year = 2015

External links

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