Elementor #27202

OSCE Checklist - Venous Cutdown

🏥 OSCE Checklist — Venous Cutdown (Greater Saphenous Vein)

✅ Correct: 2 ⚠️ Partial: 1 ❌ Not Done: 0
🤝 Domain A: Introduction & Communication (1-6)
#Checklist ItemScore
1Introduces self — states name and designation clearly to the patient
2Explains procedure — small surgical cut to access vein for emergency access
3Explains indication — shock, collapsed veins, or emergency fluid resuscitation
4Explains risks — mentions infection, nerve injury, bleeding, and hematoma
5Obtains informed consent — ensures understanding and agreement
6Reassures patient — addresses questions and concerns before starting
🧠 Domain B: Knowledge (7-13)
#Checklist ItemScore
7States indications — shock, burned/scarred, failed peripheral IV, drug users
8States contraindications — active infection, coagulopathy, iliac vein avulsion
9Identifies sites — Greater Saphenous (MC), Basilic, Cephalic
10Identifies GSV landmark — 1cm anterior & 1cm superior to medial malleolus
11Names nerve at risk — Saphenous nerve (parallel to GSV)
12Lists equipment — scalpel, hemostats, silk, cannula, antiseptic, lidocaine, fluid
13States catheter removal time — within 12–24 hours to avoid complications
🖐️ Domain C: Psychomotor / Procedural Steps (14-33)
#Checklist ItemScore
14Prepare IV line — removes air from tubings and hangs it on IV stand
15Wears PPE correctly — sterile gown, mask, eye protection, sterile gloves
16Positions patient correctly — supine with leg slightly rotated externally
17Antiseptic prep — applies povidone-iodine in circular outward motion
18Sterile draping — ensures medial malleolus remains visible as landmark
19Administers local anesthesia — 1% lidocaine (subcutaneous infiltration)
20Makes correct skin incision — 3cm transverse at identified landmark
21Blunt dissection — identifies GSV through subcutaneous tissue
22Isolates GSV — avoids saphenous nerve; gentle tissue handling
23Places two silk suture ties — proximal and distal around the vein
24Lifts vein using slings for counter-traction before venotomy
25Performs venotomy — No.15 blade, approx 40% of vein diameter
26Inserts cannula — carefully into venotomy and advances proximally
27Confirms placement — checks blood return or flushes with saline
28Secures cannula — proximal tie around hub; distal vein ligated
29Connects IV fluids — attaches tubing from prepared line
30Verifies flow — ensures IV drip is running properly
31Wound closure — skin sutures and secures tubing to skin
32Applies sterile dressing over the wound site
33Disposes sharps and waste safely and appropriately
💬 Domain D: Attitude & Professionalism (34-39)
#Checklist ItemScore
34Maintains sterile field — no breaks in aseptic technique
35Handles tissues gently — avoids rough or careless manipulation
36Works systematically and calmly under pressure
37Communicates with patient/team throughout the procedure
38Responds to complications correctly — (e.g., if artery hit)
39Aftercare explanation — complications and removal time

📊 OSCE PERFORMANCE SUMMARY

DomainScoreMax%Status

Common Mistakes Made by Students

  • ❌ Wrong landmark — Not placing incision correctly (must be 1 cm anterior + 1 cm superior to medial malleolus)
  • ❌ Too deep initial incision — Cutting directly into the vein instead of performing blunt dissection
  • ❌ Forgetting two suture ties — Placing only one silk suture or placing both on the same side (proximal OR distal)
  • ❌ Venotomy too large — Making an incision >50% of the vein diameter, causing the vein to tear
  • ❌ Forgetting to tie the distal suture before venotomy — leads to backflow/bleeding
  • ❌ Breaking sterile field — Touching unsterile surfaces, poor glove technique, improper draping
  • ❌ Ignoring the saphenous nerve — Not mentioning or protecting it during dissection
  • ❌ Not confirming cannula placement — Skipping blood return/saline flush step
  • ❌ Skipping consent or giving a rushed, incomplete explanation
  • ❌ Not securing the cannula — Forgetting to tie the proximal suture around the hub
  • ❌ Forgetting wound closure — Leaving the incision open after cannula placement
  • ❌ Not mentioning catheter removal time (12–24 hours) during post-procedure counselling
  • ❌ Poor communication — Speaking to the manikin/model like an object, not a patient

What the Examiner Particularly Wants to See

Examiners in OSCE specifically look for these high-yield points:

  1. Correct anatomy knowledge — Exact GSV landmark (1 cm anterior + 1 cm superior to medial malleolus) and awareness of the saphenous nerve
  2. The TWO suture technique — Proximal and distal silk ties placed correctly before venotomy; this is a classic examiner focus point
  3. Venotomy precision — 40% transverse diameter, not more; shows surgical judgment
  4. Sterile technique — Any break in asepsis is an automatic concern; examiners watch gloves, draping, and instrument handling closely
  5. Confirmation of cannula placement — Blood return or saline flush; many students skip this
  6. Emergency mindset — Can the student verbalize what to do if percutaneous access fails, in a calm and systematic manner?
  7. Complication awareness — Especially saphenous nerve injuryair embolism, and thrombophlebitis
  8. Communication quality — Does the student actually speak to the patient as a human being, or just perform steps mechanically?
  9. Indication to remove catheter — Mentioning 12–24 hour removal shows depth of clinical knowledge
  10. Holistic flow — A smooth, uninterrupted sequence from preparation → procedure → closure → aftercare without needing to be prompted