Catheter
From Wacklepedia - The Free Encyclopedia
In
medicine, a
catheter is any hollow thin flexible tube designed to be inserted into the body. The process of inserting a catheter is called
catheterization.
Catheters are used for:
- draining urine from the bladder, see urinary catheterization
- administering fluids, intravenous medication or parenteral nutrition into a vein
- injecting dye into blood vessels or other structures to visualize abnormalities, as in cardiac catheterization, also known as coronary angiography
- measuring blood pressure directly in a blood vessel
A
central line is a conduit for giving drugs or fluids into a large-bore catheter positioned either in a vein near the heart or just inside the upper chamber of the heart itself (in the atrium).
See also: