Swan Ganz Catheters

Dr. Frossman in his glory

Dr. Swan (right) and Dr. Ganz (left)

  • Dr. Werner Frossman (at 25 years old!) was a German physician/cardiology intern who went against the norm and placed a catheter in his own heart on August 29, 1929; after placing the catheter via the antecubital vein under fluoroscopy, he climbed two flights of stairs and got an x-ray proving it was in the right atrium, all with a catheter dangling from his arm

    • He got in severe trouble for this and had to give up cardiology; became a urologist. Later in 1956, he won the Nobel Prize in medicine for his work

    • Right heart catheterization became a valuable tool for measuring hemodynamics, gas exchange and heart-lung interaction; but it all required fluoroscopic assistance and marked technical skill for correct placement, and had to be done in the cath lab

  • Dr. Jeremy Swan was watching sailboats in Santa Monica Bay during an outing with his children and he came up with the idea of a flow directed catheter - he postulated a small balloon would act as sail/parachute by catching blood flow, increasing the ease and frequency of passage (you can do it at bedside!!)

  • In 1970 Dr. Swan, with the held of his friend Dr. Ganz, created a a balloon tipped flow directed pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) that became accepted widely as a bedside tool for hemodynamic measurements

    • In 2016, Wheeler et. al. concluded in a RCT that PAC guided therapy did not improve survival or organ function but DID have more complications when compared to CVL guided therapy - which is why we don’t see it in every one of our patients

  • It is similar to a CVL except a balloon at the end of the catheter is inflated with ~1.5cc of air, which allows it to “float” through the right side of the heart and “wedge” into a small branch of the pulmonary artery. You’ll often hear this called “floating a swan”


so.. what are you looking at when you float a swan?

  • hemodynamic values, specifically cardiac performance and adequacy of systemic oxygenation

    • CO/CI: measured with thermodilution

      • Thermodilution: you take the difference in temps and put it in a graph to spit out a measurement (done on monitor in room)

    • PA Pressure - continuous measurement if your SGC is in correct placement (see below)

    • Pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP)

      • You wedge balloon as below and get one measurement, then deflate balloon

    • CVP (RAP) - continuous measurement

    • Mixed venous O2 sat (SCVO2) -> unlike a central line, on a swan this will be continuous measurement

Waveforms

 
 

Causes of elevated RAP

  • RV Infarction

  • pHTN

  • Pulmonic Stenosis

  • L —> R shunts

  • Tricuspid valvular disease

  • volume overload

  • Impaired RV contractile function

Causes of elevated PAP

  • Primary lung disease

  • Primary pHTN

  • PE

  • Hypoxemia w/pulm vasoconstriction

  • L —> R shunts

  • L heart failure (any cause)

  • Mitral valvular disease

  • Volume overload

Causes of Elevated PAWP

  • mitral stenosis

  • LV systolic dysfunction

  • Primary LV diastolic dysfunction

  • LV volume overload

  • Decr LV compliance

Normal Pressures

  • Right Atrial Pressure (CVP): 3-8 mmHg

  • RV Pressure: 15-30/3-8 mmHg

  • PA Pressure: 15-30/5-15 mmHg

  • PCWP: <15mmHg

  • CO: 4.5-8 L/min

  • CI: 2.5-4 L/min/m2

  • SvO2 >70%

Inserting a Introducer followed by inserting a SGC

Rachel F

Rachel is a physician assistant who has been holding down the ICU since 2016. She joined the Pulmcast podcast in 2017 and has been hooked on FOAMed ever since. Rachel has a passion for teaching using technology with a special focus on preserving dignity in the ICU. When she's not at work, you’ll find her playing with her golden retrievers, hunting for thrift store treasures, and soaking up time with her husband and son.

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Central Venous Oxygen Saturation monitoring (SCVO2) and DO2 (oxygen delivery)