Love bites could help prevent botched injections and save the NHS millions: Technology inspired by hickeys makes veins easier to spot by drawing blood to the skin
- Hickeys increases the diameter of the veins in our neck by up to a third
- This helps to draw blood to the area, making veins easier to locate
- Sparked the idea to create a tourniquet with an inbuilt pumping device
Technology inspired by love bites will help prevent botched injections, scientists claim.
Researchers say hickeys, as they are also known, increase the diameter of the veins in the neck by up to a third.
This draws blood to the area, making the veins easier to locate. Difficulty finding blood vessels is a major reason for why so many fail.
But new technology, which uses an in-built pumping device to create a similar level of suction to a love bite, will change that.
The device, called Vacuderm and tested by a team of researchers at Nottingham Trent University, will be available on the NHS from June.
Pictured (l-to-r): Dr Arash Bakhtyari – CEO of Olberon Medical Innovations, the developer; Dr Amin Al-Habaibeh, professor of intelligent engineering systems; and Maryam Asrar, research assistant in artificial intelligence of medical applications, who is holding the technology
The technology is being developed by Olberon Medical Innovations, also based in Nottingham, with support from the NTU team.
The project is being led by Dr Amin Al-Habaibeh, professor of intelligent engineering systems.
‘Veins can be especially hard to find in people who have poor or no visible veins and in certain groups of people such as children and older people,’ Dr Habaibeh told MailOnline.
‘If a clinician has to try several times to find a vein, it can be traumatic for both the practitioner and patient.
‘But this simple technology, which works on a similar basis to a love bite, could help reduce the number of botched injections significantly by making veins more prominent and easier to find.’
Some 30million cannulations are performed yearly on the NHS, of which up to a third fail, according to the researchers.
Vacuderm is worn like a wristwatch with a stretchy strap and buckle (1). Once tightly fastened, a clinician pushes the pump ‘at least ten-to-15 times’ (2) to cause the patient’s veins to enlarge. The cannula is then inserted as normal (3) and the strap is released by lifting the buckle (4)
Cannulations involve placing a thin tube, known as a cannula, into a vein to medication, sample blood or insert a surgical instrument.
Tourniquets are already used when inserting a cannula, however, the in-built pumping device of the Vacuderm is novel.
Failed insertions most often affect children, with around half of attempts being unsuccessful, which can be painful and increase the risk of infection.
These failed attempts occur due to veins being ‘non-visible’ and ‘non-palpable’, the researchers wrote in the British Journal of Nursing.
The cost of each cannulation procedure is estimated to be in the region of £33, according to medical studies.
Dr Al-Habaibeh said the cost to the NHS of failed cannulation can therefore be estimated to be around £297million per year, including equipment and staff time.
To put Vacuderm to the test, 20 healthy volunteers had a cannula fitted with the technology on the back of one hand and without it on the other.
A change to the participants’ vein diameter was estimated by comparing Vacuderm as a tourniquet with and without pumping.
Infrared technology was also used to assess any change in temperature to the participants’ hands.
The tourniquet (pictured) has a pumping device that creates a similar suction to love bites
A raised temperature suggests blood is pooling in that area, which enables doctors to use infrared cameras to track down hard-to-spot veins.
Results revealed Vacuderm increased the diameter of the participants’ veins by 24-to-31 per cent and their cross sectional area by 54-to-71 per cent.
It also significantly raised the veins’ temperature and ‘clarity’.
‘It is clearly shown that pumping effect is playing a vital role, not only in the expansion of veins,’ the researchers wrote.
‘But also in improving the visibility of the veins as compared to the situation where there is no pumping.
‘Pumping effect contributes by producing more tension in the veins due to which the diameter of veins expands eventually.’
Dr Arash Bakhtyari, chief executive of Olberon Medical Innovations, added: ‘The Vacuderm was developed because patients had bad experiences with needle insertion and this study shows that the Vacuderm is likely to help with this.’
WHAT IS A CANNULA?
A cannula is a very small, flexible tube that is placed in one of the veins, usually on the back of the hand or arm.
It is used to insert medicines and fluids straight into the bloodstream or take blood samples.
Having a cannula inserted is similar to having a blood test and usually takes just a few minutes.
A tourniquet may be used to make the veins easier to access.
An anaesthetic cream or cold spray is offered before insertion to numb the area.
A needle is then inserted into one of the veins before being removed, leaving a tiny, thin tube behind.
The IV cannula is taped into place and may have a bandage over it to prevent it being knocked.
A cannula should not hurt once in place and can be left for several days.
It only takes a few seconds to remove, which is done by a nurse.
Some patients are left with a small bruise, which should heal as normal.
Source: Great Ormond Street Hospital
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