The Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting: Should It Still Be Used?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Role of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting
3. The Role of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter in Cardiac Surgery
4. The Role of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter in Liver Transplantation
5. The Role of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter in Lung Transplantation
6. The Role of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter in Patients with Circulatory Shock
7. Comparison of Different Cardiac Output Monitoring Devices with PAC
8. Complications
- Complicated vascular access (pneumothorax, hematoma).
- Arrhythmias (e.g., heart block, ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation).
- Catheter knotting.
- Pulmonary thrombosis and infarction.
- Endothelial or valvular damage.
- Colonization and bacteremia.
- Pulmonary artery rupture.
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study Design | Clinical Setting | Sample | Measures | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Retrospective cohort study [4] | Cardiac surgery | 6844 patients, divided into 2 cohorts with or without PAC | Primary outcome: 30-day in-hospital mortality, hospital LOS, cardiopulmonary morbidity, infectious morbidity Exploratory outcomes: AKI, gastrointestinal complication, liver complication, neurologic complication, SOFA CV unplanned readmissions, and all-cause readmissions | PAC use was associated with ↓ hospital LOS, ↓ cardiopulmonary morbidity, ↑ infectious morbidity |
Observational study [5] | Cardiac surgery | 11,820 patients undergoing coronary or valvular surgery; PAC versus standard CVP monitoring | Impact of PAC on short-term postoperative outcomes (operative mortality, ICU length of stay, stroke, sepsis, renal failure, RBC transfusion) | PAC group had ↑ intraoperative RBC transfusion, longer ICU length of stay, and ↑ postoperative RBC transfusion |
Retrospective study [6] | Cardiac surgery | 116,333 patients undergoing PAC placement during cardiac surgery | Intraoperative outcomes: death, cardiac arrest, RBC transfusions | PAC use was associated with a ↓RBC transfusion; death and cardiac arrest cases were similar between the two groups, although a trend towards ↓ mortality could be observed in the PAC group |
Prospective observational study [7] | Cardiac surgery | 31 patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery with PAC monitoring | Compared measurements of RV function between 3D TEE and PAC | A high correlation was found between measurements made with a PAC and with 3D TEE |
Prospective observational study [8] | Cardiac surgery | 78 patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery | Correlation between 2D- and 3D-echocardiography-derived CO with thermodilution-derived CO before and after CPB | 2D- and 3D-derived measurements are not interchangeable with PAC measurements; this study did not support replacing PAC measurements with echocardiography |
Retrospective study [9] | Liver surgery | 316 patients undergoing liver transplantation who were monitored intraoperatively with TEE alone, PAC alone, or both methods | Total hospital LOS, ICU LOS, need for postoperative mechanical ventilation, new postoperative need for dialysis, postoperative myocardial ischemia, cerebrovascular complication, return to the operating room within 7 days of transplant, and death within 30 days of transplant | TEE + PAC associated with ↓ length of hospitalization and 30-day mortality rate but ↑ new postoperative need for dialysis; PAC vs. TEE associated with ↓ length of hospitalization and 30-day mortality rate |
Device | Type | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|
PAC [37] | Invasive | The ability to measure several hemodynamic parameters beyond CO | Complications associated with insertion of the catheter Invasiveness |
Continuous CO by PAC [37] | Invasive | Continuous CO measurement The ability to measure several hemodynamic parameters beyond CO | Complications associated with insertion of the catheter Invasiveness |
PiCCO [33] | Minimally invasive | Continuous CO measurement | Arterial waveform artifact may significantly affect data accuracy Requires transpulmonary thermodilution calibration Requires intra-arterial and central venous access Inability to measure pulmonary artery pressures |
LiDCO [32] | Minimally invasive | Continuous CO measurement Useful in goal-directed therapy | Arterial waveform artifact may significantly affect data accuracy Irregular pulse rate may affect data accuracy Calibration affected by neuromuscular blockers Contraindicated in lithium therapy Requires transpulmonary lithium dilution calibration Inability to measure pulmonary artery pressures or extravascular lung water |
FloTrac [38] | Minimally invasive | Continuous CO measurement | Arterial waveform artifact may significantly affect data accuracy CO measurements are not accurate enough for use in patients with septic shock, advanced liver disease and other medical conditions associated with decreased vascular tone. |
PRAM [39] | Minimally invasive | Continuous CO measurement | Intra-arterial catheter required for reliable trace Technical complications (e.g., over- or under-damping of arterial waveforms) Patient-related complications (e.g., arrhythmias, aortic valve pathology, mechanical assist device) |
TEE [40] | Minimally invasive | Useful in the evaluation of cardiac anatomy and function, preload, and myocardial ischemia | Significant training and experience required Accurate readings are operator dependent Not continuous Time consuming |
ED [37] | Minimally invasive | Useful in goal-directed therapy | Measures flow only in descending thoracic aorta Assumptions about aortic size may not be accurate Accurate readings are operator dependent |
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Senoner, T.; Velik-Salchner, C.; Tauber, H. The Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting: Should It Still Be Used? Diagnostics 2022, 12, 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12010177
Senoner T, Velik-Salchner C, Tauber H. The Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting: Should It Still Be Used? Diagnostics. 2022; 12(1):177. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12010177
Chicago/Turabian StyleSenoner, Thomas, Corinna Velik-Salchner, and Helmuth Tauber. 2022. "The Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting: Should It Still Be Used?" Diagnostics 12, no. 1: 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12010177
APA StyleSenoner, T., Velik-Salchner, C., & Tauber, H. (2022). The Pulmonary Artery Catheter in the Perioperative Setting: Should It Still Be Used? Diagnostics, 12(1), 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12010177