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Central Line Insertion & Pneumothorax - cdn.ymaws.com · Pneumothorax (30%) Hemothorax Hematoma...

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Central Line Insertion & Pneumothorax Katherine Freedman RN, BSN, CCRN Villanova University // Crozer Chester Medical Center
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Central Line Insertion& Pneumothorax

Katherine Freedman RN, BSN, CCRNVillanova University // Crozer Chester Medical Center

83 y.o. Male presents for a TAVR

What is a TAVR you ask?

TAVR: Transcatheter Aortic Valve ReplacementA minimally invasive approach for implanting an artificial valve inside

a stenotic aortic valve, performed under fluoroscopy.

TAVR: Too unstable for traditional valve replacement surgery

History of Presenting Illness● 83 y.o.● Aortic Stenosis● NKDA● Height: 180.3 cm● Weight: 75.3 kg

Past Medical History● Aortic Valve Stenosis● Cardiomyopathy● CAD● Hyperlipidemia● Anemia● HTN

● CKD● Bladder neoplasm● Diverticulosis● GERD

Aortic Valve Stenosis● AS causes an increased preload

○ LV Concentric Hypertrophy○ Increased LV diastolic function

■ Increased risk for ischemia● Reliance on atrial “kick”

○ Maintain NSR ● Sensitivity to changes in SVR

○ Decreased perfusion and CO● Sensitivity to volume changes

○ Hypovolemia → decreased preload → decreased CO ● Sensitivity to rate changes

○ Tachycardia → decreased ejection time → decreased myocardial perfusion

AS VS ARParameter AS AR

LV preload Increased Normal to increased

HR Normal to slow Modest increase

Rhythm SR SR

Contractility Maintain Maintain

SVR Modest increase Decrease

PVR Maintain Maintain

Medications● Aspirin● Lovastatin● Metoprolol● Keflex● Coenzyme Q● Vitamin B12● Iron

Labs● K: 4.2● BUN: 24● Cr: 1.1● Glucose: 117● eGFR: >60

● Hgb: 10.9● Hct: 34.3● APTT: 32● PT: 13.4● INR: 1.03

Diagnostic Studies● 12 Lead EKG, ECHO, Cardiac Cath● 12 Lead EKG shows NSR● “Severe Aortic Stenosis” with an aortic valve area 0.8 cm2

○ Nagelhaut defines severe as <0.5 cm2 and moderate as 0.7-0.9 cm2

● EF 30%● Moderate MR● Trace TR

The Plan● Preinduction Art Line● Fentanyl, Versed, Etomidate, Vecuronium induction● Intubate with 8.0 Oral ETT● Sevoflurane● Right IJ CVC with PA Catheter● Extubate and transfer to CIUC

When they told me I would be doing the art line and then intubating

Post-Induction Picture● HR: 70-80’s● BP: 130s/90s● SPO2: 99%● ETCO: 33-36 mmHg● Vent Settings: VC // VT 550 // RR 10 // PEEP 5 ● Sevo 1.5%

Then they said I would be getting sterile to place the CVC

And they told me I would do fine

What could possibly go wrong?● Infection (5-26%)● Pneumothorax (30%)● Hemothorax● Hematoma (2-26%)● Arterial insertion (4.2-9.3%)● The inexperienced student with 3 “coaches” on the sidelines

The Setup ● Patient will be fully draped from head to toe● Exposed skin will be prepped with Chlorhexidine

○ The most efficacious antiseptic● Clinician’s hair will be covered and a mask will be worn● Clinician will don sterile gown and gloves

How to Don a Sterile Gown

How it felt when I was donning the sterile gown

The Position ● Right side IJ CVC insertion● 10-15° Trendelenburg

○ Allows gravity to enhance central venous filling○ Creates a larger target and smaller risk of air embolism

● Head rotated to the left● Physical landmarks● Insert the needle at a 30-40° angle

○ Caudally toward the ipsilateral nipple

What a view

Actual footage of me at the head of the bed while sterile

USE THE ULTRASOUND, KATE.

Not compressibleCompressible

Transverse View of the Right Neck StructuresMedial Lateral

The Kit

The Insertion● Insert the introducer needle at a 30-40° angle

○ Caudally toward the ipsilateral nipple○ Aspirate the whole time

● Remove the syringe and needle from the introducer catheter● Attach the pressure transducing tubing

○ Confirm venous placement○ Remove

● Insert guidewire○ Be cognizant of the distance, never lose visualization of the guidewire

● Remove Introducer catheter● Use scalpel to dilate insertion site● Insert Central venous access device with gentle pressure, do not force it● Aspirate all air and then flush and cap● Suture into place

Seldinger TechniqueInsertion of a catheter into an artery or vein by inserting narrow bore needle and then advancing a guidewire through the existing catheter, then a larger catheter may be placed over the guidewire.

How it feels preparing and inserting a PA Catheter for the first time

PA Catheter Insertion

0-10

15-30/0-8 15-30/5-15

5-15

PA Catheter Insertion● IJ to SVC● IJ to RA● IJ to RV● IJ to PA● IJ to PCW

● 15 cm

● 35-45 cm● 25-35 cm● 15-25 cm

● 40-50 cm

Post Insertion Picture● HR: 70-80’s● BP: 130s/90s● SPO2: 99%● ETCO: 30-35 mmHg● CVP 11 // PAP 29/17● Vent Settings: VC // VT 550 // RR 10 // PEEP 5 ● Sevo 1.5%

About 10 minutes later...

ETCO2 is 16 mmHg with a dampened waveform

What do you want to do?

What do you want to do?● Troubleshoot

○ Manually ventilate○ Check all connections○ Check ETCO2 tubing○ Check water trap○ Auscultate

● Lower MV○ Drop VT to 500 and RR to 8

ETCO2 is holding steady at 14-16 mmHg, PCO2 28. Everything is connected, vital signs are stable,

the patient is easy to manually ventilate, and had no change in ETCO2 when lowering MV.

Hypocarbia Causes● Increased Carbon Dioxide Elimination● Decreased Pulmonary Perfusion● Decreased Carbon Dioxide Production● Airway/Equipment Problems

Hypocarbia Complications● Decreased myocardial oxygen supply● Increased coronary vascular resistance● Increased risk of coronary artery vasospasm● Increased coronary microvascular leakage● Increased myocardial oxygen demand● Decreased cerebral blood flow● Decreased cerebral oxygen delivery

Differential Diagnosis ● Hyperventilation● Decreased CO● Pulmonary Embolism● Pneumothorax● Esophageal Intubation● Extubation● Deep Anesthetic

Pneumothorax

Pneumothorax● Respiratory distress● Hypoxia● Tachypnea● Absent or distant lung sounds● Tachycardia● Pulsus paradoxus ● We did not have a normal presentation

Pneumothorax● One of the most common complications of CVC insertion

○ Incidence between 1-6.6%○ Represents 30% of all CVC complications

● More likely to occur with○ Emergent situations, large catheters, increased number of

needle passes, SC vs IJ, inexperience

What went wrong?● Inexperience● Clinician inserting was not the one to drape● Feeling rushed so as not to upset the surgeon● “Through and Through”

Resolution● Right sided chest tube was placed by the surgeon● The pneumothorax was caught early and did not worsen with

positive pressure ventilation● Serial ABGs● Extubated and transferred to CICU without complication

References 1. Ayas NT, Norena M, Wong H, Chittock D, Dodek PM. Pneumothorax after insertion of central venous catheters in the intensive care unit: association with month of year and week of month. Quality & Safety in Health Care. 2007;16(4):252-255. doi:10.1136/qshc.2006.021162.

2. Bannon MP, Heller SF, Rivera M. Anatomic considerations for central venous cannulation. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy. 2011;4:27-39. doi:10.2147/RMHP.S10383.

3. Freeman BS, Berger JS. Anesthesiology Core Review. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2014.

4. Kornbau C, Lee KC, Hughes GD, Firstenberg MS. Central line complications. International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science. 2015;5(3):170-178. doi:10.4103/2229-5151.164940.

5. Nagelhout JJ, Plaus KL. Nurse Anesthesia. 5th Edition. St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2014.

6. Roldan CJ, Paniagua L. Central Venous Catheter Intravascular Malpositioning: Causes, Prevention, Diagnosis, and Correction. Western Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2015;16(5):658-664. doi:10.5811/westjem.2015.7.26248.

7. Tsotsolis N, Tsirgogianni K, Kioumis I, et al. Pneumothorax as a complication of central venous catheter insertion. Annals of Translational Medicine. 2015;3(3):40. doi:10.3978/j.issn.2305-5839.2015.02.11.


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