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Intravenous Feeding

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oakville | 01:25 Thu 27th Jan 2011 | Body & Soul
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When I was a very young child in Bristol in the 1940s I suffered from peritonitis and had surgery to correct this.
I remember I had tubes attatched to each ankle and often cried out to the nurses "Take these things off my legs". I still have the scars from this time.
My question is: I think these tubes were part of an intravenous feed and were placed where I could not easily reach them, although I can't be sure.
If so is this method still used today?
Can anyone shed light on this for me?
Thank you
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oakvile.

Intravenous feeding (into a vein) is still used today for balancing body fluids, particularly if there is vomiting and intense fluid loss due to diarrhoea.
You can insert the needle any where that a vein presents.arm, leg and even the scalp in babies.The big vein in the neck (Jugular or Subclavian) can also be used.

In you particular case, it might be that the only vein that they could find was on the inside of the ankle and even then, they may well have had to "cut down" at the ankle to find a vein.....1940´s you say.

Tubes can also be inserted into arteries, but this is hardly ever done for "feeding" purposes.

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