Lightning rounds 50: Mastering PA catheter placement with Matt Siuba
Critical Care Scenarios - A podcast by Critical Care Scenarios - Wednesdays

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We learn the vanishing art of placing the PA (Swan-Ganz) catheter, with intensivist and friend of the podcast Matt Siuba (@msiuba). Learn more at the Intensive Care Academy! Find us on Patreon here! Buy your merch here! Takeaway points * Good sheath placement: ensure your skin nick is in the same hole as your dilator; use patient, steady pressure, especially as the “shoulder” (where the dilator meets the sheath) reaches the skin; insert the dilator completely into the sheath so you can see if it shifts, and dilate using both hands (one near the tip, one at the back holding the sheath and wire). * The right IJ is best (try to leave this open when placing non-positional lines like a triple lumen), left subclavian next best, third choice left IJ or right subclavian. Femoral placement is very tough without fluoroscopy; it requires two turns (into the RV, then out into the PA) and can be challenging to escape the RV. A brachial vein in the arm can occasionally be used as well. * Floating out of the left IJ is often obstructed by bumping into the innominate-SVC junction. Instilling just 0.5-1 cc of air in the balloon is often enough to float around this turn. This occurs less from the left subclavian or brachials, but if it does occur, the same maneuver may help. * Remember to place the contamination sleeve (Swandom) before inserting the Swan! Once you’re in, it’s too late; you’ll need to remove it and refloat. You don’t need to seal it, just get it around the catheter. * Flush each lumen before inserting and cap each one, except the distal/PA port. Connect that to your transducer and flick it to test transduction. Check the balloon; rarely, but sometimes, they will fail. Remember to always inflate the balloon using the included volume-limited syringe, and allow it to passively deflate from its elasticity. * If a balloon does not self-deflate, replace the catheter; the balloon is not reliable. * Once you reach 15 cm, inflate the balloon. By 15-20 cm, you should be in the RA; measure your RA pressure (overall mean is fine for ICU purposes). If the waveform is not distinct with clear components, flush the catheter; it may be damped by clots. * Tricuspid pathology (TR, stenosis) can make a Swan challenging, but not as often as people think. And the harder the Swan, often, the more important the data. * If you reach 30 cm without an RV tracing (except in some very large or very end-stage PH patients), you have probably gone astray, either coiled in the RA or gone through to the IVC. * Once in the RA, make a quarter rotation counter-clockwise (assuming you started with the tip curved medially). This will help orient the tip towards the tricuspid valve. If it’s not getting through, drop the balloon, come back to 20, readvance, repeat as needed. * If still not going, sometimes the tip has looped back into the RA while the middle of the catheter has “elbowed” through the tricuspid into the RV. If this happened, retract the catheter, and the tip may flop through as you come back. You’ll know this as the RV waveform will appear during retraction; inflate the balloon then and drive forward fast. * If you can’t get through a regurgitant valve, a faster/more aggressive advancement through the tricuspid valve may help. You need to launch through before it kicks you out.