Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Critical Care · IV Therapy

Central Line Types Comparison Chart

PICC vs non-tunneled CVC vs tunneled catheter vs implanted port vs hemodialysis catheter — site, lumens, dwell time, CLABSI risk, dressing schedule, flush protocol, Huber needle requirement, blood draw, indications, advantages, and disadvantages.

Educational use only. Central line selection requires provider decision-making based on patient clinical context. Follow your institution's central line policies. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Central Venous Access Type Comparison

AttributePICCNon-Tunneled CVCTunneled Catheter (Hickman / Groshong)Implanted PortHemodialysis Catheter
Access siteBasilic, brachial, or cephalic vein (antecubital or upper arm) — advanced to SVCInternal jugular (IJ), subclavian, or femoral veinIJ or subclavian vein; catheter tunneled subcutaneously to exit site on chestSubcutaneous reservoir placed on chest wall; catheter to SVCIJ (preferred) or femoral; or tunneled HD catheter (Mahurkar) to IJ
Lumens1–3 lumens (single, double, or triple-lumen PICC)1–3 lumens (single, double, or triple-lumen) — most common: triple-lumen1–3 lumens; open-ended (Hickman) or valved (Groshong)1 lumen (single) or 2 lumens (double port); accessed via Huber needle2 lumens (arterial/venous) for HD flow; some have 3rd CVC lumen
Dwell timeWeeks to months (intermediate-term: 4–13 weeks typical; can last longer)Days to weeks (short-term acute care only)Months to years (long-term: Dacron cuff creates infection barrier)Years (most durable; fully implanted when not accessed)Non-tunneled: days to weeks. Tunneled HD catheter: weeks to years.
CLABSI riskLOW–MODERATE (upper arm insertion reduces risk vs femoral CVC; PICC DVT risk notable)HIGH — especially femoral. Site risk: femoral > IJ > subclavianLOW — Dacron cuff creates subcutaneous tissue barrier against microbial migrationLOWEST — completely subcutaneous when not accessed; minimal infection risk between usesVariable: non-tunneled femoral = high; tunneled HD catheter = lower
Dressing changeTransparent dressing every 7 days (or sooner if soiled/loose). Arm circumference check q visit.Transparent dressing every 7 days. Gauze 48h if diaphoresis/bleeding. Chlorhexidine disk (Biopatch) at site.Transparent dressing every 7 days. Do NOT disturb Dacron cuff — it anchors the catheter in tissue.Only when accessed: transparent dressing over Huber needle, change every 7 days.Same as CVC or tunneled protocol depending on catheter type.
Flush protocol10 mL NS before/after each use (pulsed flush). Heparin lock per protocol if specified.Open-ended: 10 mL NS + heparin lock (unused lumens). Valved (Groshong): NS only.Hickman (open): 10 mL NS + heparin lock. Groshong (valved): NS only — no heparin.When accessed: 10 mL NS after each use. Monthly heparin flush when not in use (per protocol).Heparin 1,000–5,000 units lock each lumen after HD session (per protocol).
Huber needle required?NoNoNoYES — non-coring Huber needle REQUIRED. Regular needles damage septum (core the septum → port failure).No
Blood drawYes — discard 3–5 mL first. Withdraw slowly.Yes — discard 3–5 mL first. Never draw from TPN/heparin/vasoactive lumen.Yes — discard 5–10 mL per lumen (larger dead space). Draw slowly.Yes — access with Huber needle first. Discard 5 mL. Flush 20 mL NS after.Dedicated HD lumens only. Not for routine blood draws.
IndicationsLong-term antibiotics (> 5–7 days), TPN, chemotherapy, frequent labs, poor peripheral access, home IV therapyVasopressors (must have central access), TPN (short-term), CVP monitoring, large-volume resuscitation, emergency access, hemodynamic monitoringLong-term TPN, prolonged IV antibiotics, chemotherapy, home IV therapy, bone marrow transplantIntermittent chemotherapy, periodic IV medications, home infusion patients with long intervals between useHemodialysis access when fistula/graft unavailable; CRRT in ICU
AdvantagesEasier insertion than CVC (no subclavian/IJ risks). Peripheral insertion. Lower CLABSI than non-tunneled CVC. Good for outpatient/home therapy.Rapid access. Large-bore lumens. Multiple lumens for simultaneous incompatible drugs. CVP measurement. Immediate use.Long dwell time. Lower infection rate. Dacron cuff prevents migration. Suitable for home use.Lowest infection risk. Completely subcutaneous between uses. High patient quality of life. Years of durability.High flow rates (300–400 mL/min) required for HD. Immediate access when fistula unavailable.
DisadvantagesPICC-associated DVT (arm). Must verify tip by CXR before first use. No BP cuff/venipuncture on PICC arm. Dislodgment risk with arm movement.Pneumothorax (IJ, subclavian). Air embolism risk. Highest CLABSI risk overall. Short-term only. Requires CXR post-insertion.Surgical procedure for insertion. Complex removal. Dacron cuff complicates removal once embedded.Requires Huber needle access (procedural skill). Cannot be used emergently without proper access equipment. Surgical placement.Cannot be used for standard IV medications (dedicated HD use). Increased thrombosis risk. Infection risk.
Insertion responsibilityPICC-certified RN (many institutions) or IR/vascular surgeryMD/PA/NP (intensivist, anesthesia, hospitalist)IR or surgery (tunneling requires procedure)IR or surgery (subcutaneous implantation)MD/PA/NP; tunneled HD catheter may be placed by IR

CLABSI Risk Summary

Risk LevelCatheter / SiteWhy
HighestFemoral non-tunneled CVCProximity to perineal flora, difficult dressing maintenance, patient mobility limits asepsis, high skin flora burden
HighIJ non-tunneled CVCNear mouth/tracheal secretions; dressing loosening with neck movement; higher flora burden than subclavian
ModerateSubclavian non-tunneled CVCLower infection rate vs IJ/femoral — but highest pneumothorax and subclavian thrombosis risk at insertion
LowPICC (upper arm)Peripheral insertion, away from central flora. However: PICC-associated upper extremity DVT is a notable risk.
LowerTunneled catheter (Hickman)Dacron cuff creates tissue barrier against microbial migration from exit site to bloodstream
LowestImplanted portFully subcutaneous when not accessed — no external catheter to contaminate between uses

NCLEX Pearls

Implanted port REQUIRES non-coring Huber needle — regular needles core the septum and destroy the port permanently.

PICC: no BP cuff, no venipuncture, no heavy lifting on arm — risk of catheter dislodgment, PICC thrombosis, and compression damage.

Femoral CVC = highest CLABSI risk (groin flora, difficult dressing maintenance). Advocate to avoid when alternatives exist.

Post-CVC insertion CXR mandatory before first use — confirms SVC tip position AND rules out pneumothorax. Never use before CXR is read.

Groshong (valved) catheter: flush with NS only — no heparin needed. Hickman (open-ended): needs heparin lock.

Air embolism prevention: Valsalva or held expiration when CVC hub is open to air. Left lateral decubitus + Trendelenburg if air embolism suspected.

Vasopressors require central line — peripherally administered vasopressors cause severe tissue necrosis with extravasation.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) · Surviving Sepsis Campaign · American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →