An infrequent, but potential complication of chemotherapy is vesicant chemotherapy extravasation. Vesicants have the potential to cause blistering and ulceration when they extravasate from the vein or are inadvertently administered into the tissue. In 2007, the European Oncology Nursing Society published guidelines for extravasation prevention, detection, and management. Recommended management includes topical heating for plant alkaloid extravasations and topical cooling for anthracycline and other antitumor antibiotic vesicants. For treatment of antracycline extravasations topical dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), sodium thiosulfate, and hyaluronidase have been described in the literature but due to lack of evidence to support their use as vesican...
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence for the management of anthracycline extravasation and determine th...
is an infrequent but potentially serious complication of the administration of chemotherapeutic agen...
To verify the incidence of extravasation of cytostatic drugs in patients treated on an outpatient ba...
Systemic intravenous chemotherapeutic agents can cause multiple emergency situations including acute...
Chemotherapy extravasation may result in serious damage to patients, with irreversible local injures...
The extravasation of antineoplastic agents is an unwanted and distressing situation that can easily ...
Background: Given the high-risk nature and nurse sensitivity of chemotherapy infusion and extravasat...
Skin toxicity resulting from extravasation of chemotherapy is a major adverse effect that demand mor...
In cancer treatment, extravasation is defined as an inadvertent instillation or leakage of cytotoxic...
Extravasation is defined in oncology as an accidental leakage during the infusion of chemotherapeuti...
pears to be related to drug concen-tration, we recommend administra-tion of piroxantrone at a maximu...
Background: Various agents have been implicated in causing tissue necrosis after intravenous infusio...
Extravasation of a vesicant is a potentially disfig-uring event associated with many commonly used i...
Extravasation, the accidental leakage of an anticancer agent from a vessel into the surrounding tiss...
The extravasation of intravenous substances is a potentially catastrophic complication of intravenou...
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence for the management of anthracycline extravasation and determine th...
is an infrequent but potentially serious complication of the administration of chemotherapeutic agen...
To verify the incidence of extravasation of cytostatic drugs in patients treated on an outpatient ba...
Systemic intravenous chemotherapeutic agents can cause multiple emergency situations including acute...
Chemotherapy extravasation may result in serious damage to patients, with irreversible local injures...
The extravasation of antineoplastic agents is an unwanted and distressing situation that can easily ...
Background: Given the high-risk nature and nurse sensitivity of chemotherapy infusion and extravasat...
Skin toxicity resulting from extravasation of chemotherapy is a major adverse effect that demand mor...
In cancer treatment, extravasation is defined as an inadvertent instillation or leakage of cytotoxic...
Extravasation is defined in oncology as an accidental leakage during the infusion of chemotherapeuti...
pears to be related to drug concen-tration, we recommend administra-tion of piroxantrone at a maximu...
Background: Various agents have been implicated in causing tissue necrosis after intravenous infusio...
Extravasation of a vesicant is a potentially disfig-uring event associated with many commonly used i...
Extravasation, the accidental leakage of an anticancer agent from a vessel into the surrounding tiss...
The extravasation of intravenous substances is a potentially catastrophic complication of intravenou...
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence for the management of anthracycline extravasation and determine th...
is an infrequent but potentially serious complication of the administration of chemotherapeutic agen...
To verify the incidence of extravasation of cytostatic drugs in patients treated on an outpatient ba...