* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Basic Hemodynamics for the Cath Lab and ICU
Cardiac contractility modulation wikipedia , lookup
Heart failure wikipedia , lookup
Management of acute coronary syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Aortic stenosis wikipedia , lookup
History of invasive and interventional cardiology wikipedia , lookup
Electrocardiography wikipedia , lookup
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy wikipedia , lookup
Myocardial infarction wikipedia , lookup
Cardiac surgery wikipedia , lookup
Antihypertensive drug wikipedia , lookup
Lutembacher's syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Coronary artery disease wikipedia , lookup
Mitral insufficiency wikipedia , lookup
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia wikipedia , lookup
Atrial septal defect wikipedia , lookup
Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries wikipedia , lookup
Basic Hemodynamics Ailin Barseghian El-Farra, MD Cath Lab Essentials January 23, 2016 Pressure is created by blood within the heart or vessels. • First cardiac catheterization and pressure measurement performed on a living animal – English physiologist Stephen Hales early in the 1700s – “By accessing the internal jugular vein and carotid artery of a horse, Hales performed his experiments using a brass pipe as the catheter connected by a flexible goose trachea to a long glass column of fluid. The pressure in the white mare’s beating heart raised a column of fluid in the glass tube over 9 feet high.” Reported in the book Haemastaticks in 1733 Right Heart Catheterization INDICATIONS Indications Diagnostic and therapeutic indications: – Differentiate cause of shock or pulmonary edema – Evaluation for pulmonary hypertension – Differentiation of pericardial tamponade from constrictive and restrictive cardiomyopathy – Diagnosis of left to right shunt – Guide fluid management and hemodynamic monitoring after surgery, complicated MI, shock, etc.. CONTRAINDICATIONS Contraindications • No absolute contraindications • CAUTION in patients with pulmonary hypertension and elderly • Left bundle branch block EQUIPMENT Equipment • Catheter • Transducer • Fluid-filled tubing to connect the catheter to the transducer • Physiologic recorder to display, analyze, print and store the hemodynamic waveforms Equipment TECHNIQUE A Systematic Approach to Hemodynamic Interpretation 1. Establish the zero level and balance transducer. 2. Confirm the scale of the recording. 3. Collect hemodynamics in a systematic method using established protocols. 4. Critically assess the pressure waveforms for proper fidelity. 5. Carefully time pressure events with the ECG. 6. Review the tracings for common artifacts Precautions • Always record pressures at end-expiration (unless on PEEP) • During inspiration, pressures will be lower due to decrease in intrathoracic pressure (assuming normal conditions) • Always zero and reference the system Components of a Routine Complete Right- and Left-Heart Catheterization 1. Position pulmonary artery (PA) catheter. 2. Position aortic (AO) catheter. 3. Measure PA and AO pressure. 4. Measure thermodilution cardiac output. 5. Measure oxygen saturation in PA and AO blood samples to determine Fick output and screen for shunt. 6. Enter the left ventricle (LV) by retrograde crossing of the AO valve. 7. Advance PA catheter to pulmonary capillary wedge position (PCWP). 8. Measure simultaneous LV-PCWP. 9. Pull back from PCWP to PA. 10. Pull back from PA to right ventricle (RV) to screen for pulmonic stenosis and record RV. 11. Record simultaneous LV-RV. 12. Pull back from RV to right atrium (RA) to screen for tricuspid stenosis and record RA. 13. Pull back from LV to AO to screen for aortic stenosis. Once the catheter was in place, all lights in the room were turned off, and the Hamilton manometer (which focused a light on sensitive paper to record the pressure contour) was attached to the catheter and manipulated in absolute darkness so that its light output could be captured with a handheld mirror and adjusted to strike the paper. Researchers could then record intravascular pressures. Enson Y, Chamberlin MD. Cournand and Richards and the Bellevue Hospital Cardiopulmonary Laboratory. Columbia Magazine, Fall 2001.0000 CARDIAC CYCLE Phase 1: atrial contraction Phase 2: isovolumic contraction TV/MV closure to PV/AV opening Phase 3: rapid ejection Phase 4: reduced ejection PV/AV opening to PV/AV closure Phase 5: isovolumic relaxation PV/AV closure to TV/MV opening Phase 6: rapid ventricular filling Phase 7: reduced ventricular filling TV/MV opening to TV/MV closure PRESSURE WAVE INTERPRETATION LEFT HEART CATHETERIZATION PITFALLS ARTIFACTS CARDIAC OUTPUT Cardiac Output • Thermodilution • Fick Method Thermodilution • Bolus injection of liquid – Saline – Proximal port • Change in temperature is measured by thermistor in the distal portion of the catheter Fick Principle • Described in 1870 • Assumes rate of O2 consumption is a function of rate of blood flow times the rate of O2 pick up by the RBC Cardiac Output (L/min) Direct Fick: Vo2 measurement Indirect Fick: Vo2 estimate (3.5 mL/Kg) Limitations Thermodilution Fick • Not accurate in TR • Overestimated cardiac output at low output states • VO2 is often estimated by body weight (indirect method) rather than measured directly • Large errors possible with small differences in saturations and hemoglobin. • Measurements on room air THANK YOU Normal Pressures Site Normal Value Mean (mmHg) Pressure (mmHg) 0-5 Right Atrium (or CVP) Right Ventricle 25/5 Pulmonary Artery PCWP LV Aorta 25/10 7-12 120/10 120/80 Saturation 75% 75% 10-20 75% 95-100% 95-100% 95-100% Normal Values Site Value Sv02 0.60-0.75 Stroke Volume 60-100 ml/beat Stroke Index 33-47 ml/beat/m2 Cardiac Output 4-8 L/min Cardiac Index 2.5-4.0 L/min/m2 SVR 800-1200 dynes sec/-cm5 PVR <250 dynes sec/-cm5 MAP 70-110 mmHg References • Bangalore and Bhatt. Right heart catheterization, coronary angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention. Circulation, 2011; 124: e428-e433. • Kern, Morton J. The Cardiac Catheterization Handbook. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders Elsevier, 2011. Print. • Ragosta, Michael. Textbook of Clinical Hemodynamics. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders/Elsevier, 2008. Print.