EMLA application exceeding two hours improves pediatric emergency department
venipuncture success.
Author(s): Baxter AL(1), Ewing PH, Young GB, Ware A, Evans N, Manworren RC.
Affiliation(s): Author information:
(1)Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Southwestern, Children's Medical
Center of Dallas, TX, USA. abaxter@mmjlabs.com
Publication date & source: 2013, Adv Emerg Nurs J. , 35(1):67-75
The purpose of this study was to determine whether placing Eutectic Mixture of
Local Anesthetics (EMLA) at emergency department (ED) triage improves
venipuncture success. Emergency department triage nurses prospectively identified
patients aged 0-18 years assessed to have 50% or greater chance of needing
venipuncture while in the emergency department. Identified patients received EMLA
or no intervention according to randomized 24-h blocks. Data were collected on
need for venipuncture, venipuncture success (defined as obtaining access in one
attempt), and duration and success of EMLA application (defined as EMLA occluded
between 1 and 5 h). Parents' satisfaction and perception of pain were assessed
with a 5-item scale. Consent was obtained from 267 out of 287 patients, in whom
111 of 154 venipunctures were successful (72%). EMLA (n = 100) and
no-intervention (n = 167) groups did not differ by age or dehydration-related
illnesses. Nurses flagged patients more often on days when EMLA was not applied
(χ(2) = 37.8, df2, p < 0.0001), but with lower specificity of needing
venipuncture (48.5% no-intervention venipuncture rate vs. 73% venipuncture rate
with EMLA (χ(2) = 14.4, df2, p = 0.0001). Of the 73 EMLA patients undergoing
venipuncture, 2 removed EMLA at unknown times; 2 had application duration longer
than 5 h, and nurses chose non-EMLA venipuncture sites for 8. Punctures through
EMLA sites with appropriate duration were successful in 51/61 (84%) versus 58/89
(65%) in untreated skin (p = 0.01, odds ratio (OR) = 2.8; 95% confidence interval
(CI) [1.3, 6.2]). Success in intention-to-treat groups did not differ (OR = 1.8,
95% CI [0.87, 3.7]). Improved venipuncture success was seen linearly with
increased application duration (p = 0.018). Parents perceived less pain with
punctures through EMLA sites (p = 0.006). Venipuncture through an EMLA site
reduced pain and improved success. Rates improved with increasing application
duration. Barriers to triage EMLA placement should be evaluated. Application
longer than 2 h should be studied further as a means to improve success. EMLA was
supplied as a part of the Investigator-sponsored study program of AstraZeneca.
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