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PA Line etiquette

PA Line etiquette. Sharon /Penny. Presentation Objectives. Review indications for the use of PA catheter with heart failure patients. The difference of the four major types of PA catheters. Review the pressure data collected for the PA and catheter.

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PA Line etiquette

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  1. PA Line etiquette Sharon /Penny

  2. Presentation Objectives • Review indications for the use of PA catheter with heart failure patients. • The difference of the four major types of PA catheters. • Review the pressure data collected for the PA and catheter. • Review the risks of the use of the PA catheter. • Understand the general rules of handling an inserted PA catheter.

  3. Free online education • PACEP

  4. Invented the PA Cath • Dr Swan • Dr Ganz

  5. Indications • “There are no universally accepted indications for pulmonary artery catheterization because pulmonary artery catheters have not been shown to improve outcomes.” • However, there are situations in which pulmonary artery catheterization may be helpful to manage and assess patients • www.UpToDate.com

  6. Invasive Hemodynamic Monitoring • Invasive hemodynamic monitoring can be useful for carefully selected patients with acute HF who have persistent symptoms despite empiric adjustment of standard therapies, and • a. whose fluid status, perfusion, or systemic or • pulmonary vascular resistances are uncertain; • b. whose systolic pressure remains low, pr is associated with symptoms, despite initial • therapy; • c. whose renal function is worsening with therapy; • d. who require parenteral vasoactive agents; or • e. who may need consideration for advanced device • therapy or transplantation.

  7. Indications for PA Line • Diagnostic= Right Heart Cath • -Differentiate cause of shock • Cardiogenic/Hypovolemic /Septic • -Differentiate mechanism of pulm edema • Cardiogenic/noncardiogenic • -Evaluate pulmonary hypertension

  8. Indications for PA Line • Therapy • Heart Failure • Complicated MI • Cardiac Surgery • Pharmacological therapy • -Vasopressors, Inotropes, Vasodilators • Nonpharmacological therapy • -fluid management ieUltrafiltration

  9. Contra-indications • R.BBB • Tricuspid/pulmonic valve stenosis • Artificial tricuspid/pulmonic valves • Right Atrial/Ventricular mass • New pacemaker • Coagulopathy

  10. Types of PA Lines available • Standard • VIP • CCO • Pacing

  11. PA Catheter

  12. PA Catheter • Flow directed/balloon tipped catheter • 110cm in length, markings every 10cm • Tip of catheter in the pulmonary artery • Measures intra-cardiac pressures • Sample blood

  13. Color coded • Yellow – distal – pulmonary artery (PAP) • Blue – proximal – right atrium (CVP) • White – VIP – venous infusion port • Red – balloon inflates with 1.5cc gated syringe • Thermistor – measures blood temp • Continuous Cardiac Output (CCO) • Optical module – mixed venous oximetry(SvO2)

  14. Hemodynamic Information • Central Venous Pressure • Pulmonary Artery Pressure • Pulmonary Artery Occlusion Pressure (wedge) • Cardiac Output/Index • Mixed venous saturation • SVR, PVR, Stroke volume

  15. Risks associated with PA Line • Complicated vascular access (pneumothorax, hematoma, arterial puncture, Right ventricle perforation) • Arrhythmias (heart block, ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation) • Catheter knotting / Catheter migration • Pulmonary thrombosis and infarction • Tricuspid/Pulmonary Valve damage • Infection • Pulmonary artery rupture

  16. Arrhythmias • PVC’s and V.tach when in R. Ventricle • L.BBB + R.BBB = CHB

  17. PA Pressures Text Book Levels • CVP 0-7 • PAS 15-30 • PAD 8-15 • PAM 10-17 • PAOP M 6-12

  18. Catheter knotting

  19. Catheter migration • Know your waveforms!!! • Forward -> wedge -> pulmonary infarction • Backward -> fall into RV -> VT

  20. Pulmonary Artery Rupture • Usually fatal • Hemoptysis, hypoxia -> cardiac arrest • Intubate, PEEP -> surgery

  21. Right Heart Cath/PA Insertion

  22. Right Heart Cath/PA Insertion • YouTube - Swan Ganz Catheter Placement

  23. Errors • Incorrect transducer location • Inaccurate calibration • Over/under-damping of transducer • Incorrect catheter position • ***Incorrect interpretation of information***

  24. Incorrect transducer location Stopcock at phlebostatic axis. 4thintercostal space /midpoint of anterior-posterior chest

  25. External & Internal PA

  26. Improper Leveling

  27. Square wave test • Under-damping • Excessive tubing or stopcocks • systolic overshoot (the artificial exaggeration of systolic pressure) • Caused by the patient: hypertension, atherosclerosis, vasoconstriction, aortic regurgitation, or hyperdynamicie sepsis • Over-damping • Air bubbles, blood, kinked or non-pressure tubing • Caused by the patient: aortic stenosis, vasodilatation, or low cardiac output state

  28. Correct Placement • Correct Placement is in Zone 3 because

  29. Do • Ensure accuracy of your numbers • Measure waveforms • Draw blood out of correct port • Aseptic technique

  30. What is the wave forms looking at?

  31. Don’t • Throw away syringe or replace syringe • Put more air in balloon • Get heart failure patient out of bed without MD order • Infuse anything through the yellow port • Manipulate PA

  32. Heparin-coated • Do you know if the PA lines are heparin coated at this facility? • Can you use a heparin coated PA line on a patient with HIT?

  33. Reference • Invasive Hemodynamic Monitoring: Physiological Principles and Clinical Applications • Quick Guide to Cardiopulmonary Care 2nd Edition

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