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Course: Health and medicine > Unit 5
Lesson 7: Pulmonary hypertensionPulmonary hypertension diagnosis Swan Ganz catheterization
Created by Amy Fan.
Want to join the conversation?
- who caries this procedure out? radiologist? cardiologist? do they have to be a consultant or can they be a registrar? or specially trained nurse?(1 vote)
- In the United States, it is typically an anesthesiologist, an internal medicine doctor (like a cardiologist, pulmonologist, or intensivist), or a surgeon. Some nurse anesthetists place them as well.(4 votes)
- What type of medical equipment is a catheter and what is it's function?(1 vote)
- https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catheter
To add to the previous comment these thin tubes, Catheters, can drain urine from a bladder, pus from an abscess and, csf from the brain. These tubes can deliver fluids, anesthetic s and drugs into the blood, bladder and epidural region as well. They are flexible tubes made of silicone, latex, and other materials that are tolerated by our body's immune system.(3 votes)
- Doesn't running the catheter into the ventrical have to go through the valve which then wouldn't fully close and the pressure not really representative?(1 vote)
- would that not hurt, a lot!!(0 votes)
Video transcript
- For diagnosing pulmonary hypertension, we actually can advance a catheter all the way into the area and directly measure the pressure in the pulmonary artery. So really quickly, if we have our heart divided into the four chambers, the right atrium, right ventricle, left atrium, and left ventricle, the pulmonary arteries are plugged right into the right ventricle. In the anatomical heart, it's actually plugged into the top
of the right ventricle and it goes out this way. but I've drawn it here just to show you that it's connected to
the right ventricle. So this is our pulmonary artery. The right side of the
atrium, the right atrium receives venous blood from the body. So what we can do is access
this whole thing from the veins. What we can do is insert a
catheter into a big vein, usually one of the veins in this area, in the arm or up here near
the shoulder and neck. Wherever it is, the point is to put this catheter into the vein. Then under imaging we
can advance this catheter along our venous tree. It goes along bigger and bigger veins, finally comes to the superior vena cava. This basically goes right
into the right atrium. This catheter is designed specifically to measure pressure. We can see the pressure
in the right atrium, in the right ventricle,
in the pulmonary artery, and we can even measure the left atrium. These catheters are named after the people who came up with the technique. So they're called the Swan-Ganz catheters. Their purpose is to measure
the pulmonary artery pressure, and/or the pressures
in the other chambers. This is basically diagnostic
for pulmonary hypertension, because we're just worried about if it crosses the threshold into abnormal. So for an adult living at sea level, let's be specific, the normal pulmonary artery pressure would be somewhere around 8 to 20. Notice how this is a lot
less than the pressures on the systemic side. The left side of our
heart has to deal with blood pressure levels, which
is 120, 140 in some people. On the right side, we're
pumping into an area that's normally 8 to 20 mmHg. For pulmonary hypertension, technically we define it as a value that's above 25 mmHg as well. But this varies widely
according to people. It can change based on altitude. It can change based on your height, a lot of different factors. But in general, the higher it is, then the more hypertensive we are.