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An Academic Hospitalist-Run Outpatient Paracentesis Clinic

Overview
Journal Fed Pract
Specialty Health Services
Date 2022 Apr 21
PMID 35444390
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Patients needing large-volume paracenteses (LVPs) can occupy inpatient hospital beds and unnecessarily use inpatient resources.

Methods: We describe an outpatient paracentesis clinic that was part of a quality assurance initiative at the Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Pennsylvania. A retrospective review was conducted that included patient age, sex, etiology of ascites, amount of ascites removed, time of the procedure, complications, and results of ascites cell count and cultures abstracted from the electronic health record.

Results: Over 74 months, 506 paracenteses were performed on 82 patients. The mean volume removed was 7.9 L, and the mean time of the procedure was 33.3 minutes. There were 5 episodes of postprocedure hypotension that required admission for 3 patients. One episode of abdominal wall hematoma occurred that required admission. Two patients developed incarceration of an umbilical hernia after the paracentesis; both required surgical repair. Without the clinic, almost all the 506 outpatient LVPs we performed would have resulted in a hospital admission.

Conclusion: An outpatient paracentesis clinic run by academic hospitalists can safely and quickly remove large volumes of ascites and minimize hospitalizations.

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Disparities in Care for Low-Income Patients with Cirrhosis: Implementing an Innovative Outpatient Clinic for Refractory Ascites in a Safety Net Hospital.

Dowlatshahi S, Koh J, Vyas A, Mack W, Turner B J Gen Intern Med. 2024; 39(7):1245-1251.

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Transitioning from the Emergency Department to a General Internist Outpatient Clinic for Paracentesis: A Qualitative.

Koh J, Dowlatshahi S, Turner B Res Sq. 2024; .

PMID: 38234824 PMC: 10793502. DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3793244/v1.

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