What if you don't have a commercial irrigation setup?
Trick of the Trade:
Irrigate wound using an 18-gauge needle with a clear plastic cup as a shield
An alternative approach:
Irrigate wound using an 18-gauge angiocatheter with a clear urine cup as a shield
It makes me a little nervous to irrigate a wound with a needle (because of the unpredictable movements of patients). Also, we don't have clear plastic cups in our ED. So, I rigged a similar setup using an 18-gauge angiocatheter and urine cup.
Use an 18-gauge needle to poke a tiny hole in the bottom of the urine cup. You may need to widen the hole a little by poking the plastic several times just adjacent to the initial hole.
Slide the 18-gauge angiocatheter into the hole and irrigate away!
It makes me a little nervous to irrigate a wound with a needle (because of the unpredictable movements of patients). Also, we don't have clear plastic cups in our ED. So, I rigged a similar setup using an 18-gauge angiocatheter and urine cup.
Use an 18-gauge needle to poke a tiny hole in the bottom of the urine cup. You may need to widen the hole a little by poking the plastic several times just adjacent to the initial hole.
Slide the 18-gauge angiocatheter into the hole and irrigate away!
Thanks to Dr. Gemma Morabito (Rome, Italy) for telling me about this great idea on her site Medicinadurgenza. The trick and video are by Dr. Ciro Paolillo of A Life At Risk blog fame!