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Association of position change and back massage and early ambulation with post-transfemoral coronary angiography complications.

Journal of vascular nursing : official publication of the Society for Peripheral Vascular Nursing
September 1, 2022
Suad Elsayed Abdelmotalb Elsaman
Randomized Controlled TrialJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the association of position change and back massage (PCBM) with the development of post-transfemoral coronary angiography (TFCA) complications compared to early ambulation (EA).

Results Summary

The PCBM group had a lower frequency of bleeding, ecchymosis, hematoma, and severe lower back pain, while the EA group had a lower frequency of oozing, all statistically significant. PCBM was found to reduce significant vascular complications post-TFCA.

Population

185 patients undergoing TFCA at a university hospital coronary care unit in Egypt.

Effective Dosage

Not specified (intervention involved position change and back massage).

Duration

First 6 hours post-TFCA (PCBM group received intervention immediately, EA group after 3 hours).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
position change and back massage (PCBM)
decrease
bleeding
patients undergoing TFCA
-
had a lower frequency
#1
position change and back massage (PCBM)
decrease
ecchymosis
patients undergoing TFCA
-
had a lower frequency
#2
position change and back massage (PCBM)
decrease
hematoma
patients undergoing TFCA
-
had a lower frequency
#3
position change and back massage (PCBM)
decrease
severe lower back pain
patients undergoing TFCA
-
had a lower frequency
#4
early ambulation (EA)
decrease
oozing
patients undergoing TFCA
-
had a lower frequency
#5
position change and back massage (PCBM)
decrease
significant vascular complications
patients undergoing TFCA
-
can lower the frequency
#6
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Transfemoral coronary angiography (TFCA) may be associated with postoperative complications, such as oozing, bleeding, ecchymosis, hematoma, and back pain. Thus, nursing practice must help enhance patient safety post-TFCA. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to assess the association of position change and back massage (PCBM) and early ambulation (EA) with the development of post-TFCA complications. METHODS: This study adopted a randomized controlled trial design and was conducted at the coronary care unit of a university hospital in Egypt. A sample of 185 patients undergoing TFCA was evaluated during the first 6 h post-TFCA and randomly assigned to either the PCBM (n = 92) or EA (n = 93) group, with the latter receiving the intervention after the first 3 h post-TFCA. The patients were assessed using the Post-transfemoral Coronary Angiography Complication assessment tool. RESULTS: Comparing the two groups based on post-TFCA complications, the PCBM group had a lower frequency of bleeding, ecchymosis, hematoma and severe lower back pain whereas the EA group had a lower frequency of oozing, all of which were statistically significant (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: PCBM post-TFCA can lower the frequency of significant vascular complications. RECOMMENDATION: Adopting PCBM may be valuable in post-TFCA nursing practice.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansCoronary AngiographyEarly AmbulationEcchymosisFemoral ArteryMassageBack PainHematomaHemorrhage
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy80/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations2
Citations/Year0.7
Relative Citation Ratio0.59
NIH Percentile32.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score2.27
Normalized Score0.81
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