Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine

PROCEDURAL ARTICLE
Year
: 2023  |  Volume : 28  |  Issue : 1  |  Page : 34--36

The occasional abdominal paracentesis


Peter Hutten-Czapski 
 Professor of Family Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Ontario, Canada

Correspondence Address:
MD Peter Hutten-Czapski
Professor of Family Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Ontario
Canada




How to cite this article:
Hutten-Czapski P. The occasional abdominal paracentesis.Can J Rural Med 2023;28:34-36


How to cite this URL:
Hutten-Czapski P. The occasional abdominal paracentesis. Can J Rural Med [serial online] 2023 [cited 2023 May 31 ];28:34-36
Available from: https://www.cjrm.ca/text.asp?2023/28/1/34/366269


Full Text



This article has been peer reviewed.

 Introduction



Once in a while, there is fluid in the abdomen. Usually, it is ascites from cirrhosis, heart failure or malignancy; it could even be infected. Which is it? (Imaging won't tell you.) A tap could make the diagnosis clear.[1] Can you make your patient more comfortable by draining most of it? Of course you can.[2]

 Equipment



Portable Ultrasound with abdominal probe and gelSurgical skin prep such as Proviodine5cc syringe and needles for anaesthetising the tractXylocaine 1%Sterile drapes and gown#14-gauge IV cannulaThree-way stop cockSample tubes (typically for cells chemistry and cytology)Suction tubing and body of 10cc syringe as an adapterWall suction with drainage carousel or evacuated vacuum containers

 Procedure



I was trained to do the procedure without imaging.

Position the patient on their side. I go lateral to the rectus on the dependent side to avoid injury to the hypogastric artery. Avoid any scarred areas that might have adherent bowelMark the level of shifting dullness and go dependent to there. These days, I use an ultrasound, as a quick application of the probe will find a deep pocket of ascites for you clear of any vulnerable structure [Figure 1]. I'm old school, so after finding my spot, I mark it on the patient in pen. When doing the procedure, I can watch my hands and the patient, and not the screen. Some practitioners are agile enough to do the job two-handed, when watching the screen, with a sterile ultrasound probe cover (e.g., a sterile glove palm) in one hand and the needle in the other. Use the technique that you are comfortable withPrep a generous area around the mark and drape the patient with sterile drapesUsing a small needle raise a skin bleb with 0.5 ml xylocaine [Figure 2]Attach the syringe containing residual 5–10 ml xylocaine to a three-way stop cock and the back end of a 14-gauge intravenous (IV) cannula, infiltrating as you go [Figure 3]Advance the needle slowly into the abdominal cavity alternately injecting local anaesthetic and applying slight suction. I place my finger along the needle to control the insertion [Figure 4]When ascites fluid is aspirated, withdraw the steel needle and syringe from the cannula and replace the stopcock and syringe to draw samples (if desired). The arm of the stopcock always points to the port that is turned off. Note the colour and turbidity of the liquid. If turbid, infection or malignancy may be suspect. If diagnosis is the aim, samples can be drawn for cell count (purple top tube), protein and other chemistries (red top tube), cytology (formalin) and microbiology (usually a sterile urine container)Attach the suction tubing to the unused port on the stopcock. Standard wall suction tubing can be attached to a Luer lock connector with the body of a 10cc syringe [Figure 5]Attach to wall suction and set on regulated low-to-medium suction [Figure 6]. The catheter can be easily displaced when waiting for the fluid to drain. Be careful not to withdraw all the fluids as this might drop the blood pressure.{Figure 1}{Figure 2}{Figure 3}{Figure 4}{Figure 5}{Figure 6}

 Complications



Over a few decades of rural medical practice, I have encountered common complications of blocked needle, kinked needle, needle that gets pulled out and similar incidents that require replacement of the catheter. Occasionally, I have had a persistent fluid leak that may require a purse string closure and pressure dressing. I have never had a patient go hypotensive or bleed, but if that occurs, I would treat with IV saline and potentially albumin. Bleeding from the abdominal wall can be controlled with a figure-of-eight suture. Intra-abdominal bleeding would require laparotomy.

 Conclusion



Abdominocentesis can be easily done by the rural generalist physician to provide relief or diagnosis for your patient.

Acknowledgments: I thank Dr. Marie Lynn Lacasse who helped with the photography.

Financial support and sponsorship: Nil.

Conflicts of interest: There are no conflicts of interest.

References

1Romney R, Mathurin P, Ganne-Carrié N, Halimi C, Medini A, Lemaitre P, et al. Usefulness of routine analysis of ascitic fluid at the time of therapeutic paracentesis in asymptomatic outpatients. Results of a multicenter prospective study. Gastroenterol Clin Biol 2005;29:275-9.
2Wittmer VL, Lima RT, Maia MC, Duarte H, Paro FM. Respiratory and symptomatic impact of ascites relief by paracentesis in patients with hepatic cirrhosis. Arq Gastroenterol 2020;57:64-8.