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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07556770

Sonographic Safety Margins of Subclavian Vein: Effect of View and Arm Position

Sponsor: Asan Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this observational study is to evaluate and compare the anatomical safety margins of the subclavian vein using ultrasound. Medical professionals commonly use the subclavian vein to insert central venous catheters, but nearby vulnerable structures, such as the lung and artery, can be at risk during the procedure. This study investigates two different ultrasound probe positions: supraclavicular (above the collarbone) and infraclavicular (below the collarbone). It also examines how changing the patient's arm position (from resting in a neutral position to being raised at a 90-degree angle) affects the distance between the vein and these vulnerable structures. Participants are adult patients scheduled for surgery under general anesthesia who already require ultrasound-guided vascular access. Immediately after falling asleep from anesthesia, researchers will perform a brief 3 to 5-minute ultrasound scan of the collarbone area. This is a strictly non-invasive imaging study; no research-related needle punctures or catheter insertions will be performed. The findings aim to provide robust anatomical evidence to make future vascular procedures safer for patients.

Official title: Observational Ultrasound Study of Subclavian Vein Anatomy: Comparison of Safety Margins Between Supraclavicular and Infraclavicular Positions According to Arm Position

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

20 Years - 79 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

55

Start Date

2026-04-23

Completion Date

2026-07-15

Last Updated

2026-04-29

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Non-invasive sonographic observation

Non-invasive ultrasound measurement of anatomical safety margins of the subclavian vein and adjacent structures, comparing supraclavicular and infraclavicular views in neutral and abducted arm positions.

Locations (1)

Asan Medical Center

Seoul, South Korea