Pulmonary artery (PA) false aneurysm (PAFA) formation, induced by a Swan-Ganz catheter
is a well known complication. It is estimated to occur in 0.06 to 0.2% of cases with a
PA-catheter and is associated with a mortality rate of 45 to 65%.[1, 2]
Risk factors
Established risk factors include female patients, an age greater than 60 years, the
presence of pulmonary hypertension [3], anticoagulation, stiff catheters
(hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass) [4], repeated manipulations during
cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) with migration of the PA-catheters distally as well as
leaving the catheter in its original position during CPB. [5, 1, 6]
Mechanism and pathogenesis
There are various mechanisms possible:
direct rupture of the vessel by the inflated balloon or by the catheter tip itself,
e.g. by eccentric inflation of the balloon. It is noteworthy to remember, that the
pressure in a correct inflated balloon is about 300 mmHg. This pressure is exceeded two-
to three-times while inflating such a balloon. [1]
The pathogenetic mechanism in the development of the formation of a PAFA includes the
laceration of the vessel wall with direct bleeding into the pulmonary parenchyma. When
this bleeding extends into the airways, hemoptysis will result. A rupture through the
visceral pleura on the other hand can lead to a hemothorax. Very small lacerations
sometimes reendothelialize. PAFA's do not have any intact vessel layer. The aneurysmal sac
is formed only by compressed lung parenchyma. [7]
This leaves these aneurysms prone to rupture since they are inherently unstable. [8]
Clinical Signs
The signs are related to the pathogenesis: new pulmonary infiltrates in the region of
the tip of the PA-catheter, hemoptysis, hemothorax or pericardial tamponade (rare) [5].
Diagnosis
Due to its high mortality the diagnosis of an PAFA after an initial bleeding is
essential. Radiologic findings are well-defined, persistent, pulmonary nodules or masses
adjacent to the catheter tip.
The method of choice in diagnosing PAFA's has been said to be contrast enhanced
CT-scans, especially in patients with pulmonary hypertension. Pulmonary angiography is the
second diagnostic tool. [1, 8]
Management
The goals of any therapeutic approach are as follows:
- Decrease bleeding
- Correct hypovolemia
- Preserve the function of the unaffected lung
- Preserve gas-exhange
- Localize the source of the bleeding
To achieve this goal, the following recommendations have been made:
Position the patient with the affected lung dependent to prevent soiling of the
contralateral lung. After separation of both lungs (either with a bronchial blocker or
with a double-lumen tube) the affected lung should be positioned uppermost to reduce the
pulmonary artery pressure.
Hemostasis should be controlled by reversal of the heparin (if used e.g. for CPB),
replacement of platelets and administration of coagulation factors (fresh-frozen-plasma).
As soon as the patient is stable enough, diagnosis should be made and embolisation of
the branch of the pulmonary artery should be attempted, using stainless steel wire coils.
[9, 10, 11]
Surgical therapeutic options include direct repair of the vessel (seldom) or resection
of the affected lung segment.
In cases with severe bleeding an aggressive surgical approach is mandatory: chest tubes
should be placed in large hemothorax (autotransfusion should be considered) and temporary
ligation of one PA could be necessary.
Pulmonary bleeding after restoration of spontaneous circulation after CPB should be an
early warning sign. Resuming CPB and exploration of the surgical field may be necessary. [5, 11, 2]
Prevention
To prevent every case of PA-catheter related PAFA probabely is not possible. Special
attention should be paid to the described risk-factors. PA-catheters should be without any
technical failure and the balloon at the tip should inflate symetrically. Withdrawal of
the PA-catheter a few centimeters before CPB is mandatory.
References
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pulmonary artery false aneurysm and rupture: case report and review. J Cardiothorac Vasc
Anesth 8:70-75, 1994
2. Robin ED: Death by pulmonary artery flow-directed catheter. time for
a moratorium? Chest 92:727-731, 1987
3. Feng WC, Singh AK, Drew T, Donat W: Swan-ganz catheter-induced
massive hemoptysis and pulmonary artery false aneurysm. Ann Thorac Surg 50:644-646, 1990
4. Cohen JA, Blackshear RH, Gravenstein N, Woeste J: Increased
pulmonary artery perforating potential of pulmonary artery catheters during hypothermia. J
Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 5:234-236, 1991
5. Cicenia J, Shapira N, Jones M: Massive hemoptysis after coronary
artery bypass grafting. Chest 109:267-270, 1996
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J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 5:377-378, 1991
7. Fraser RS: Catheter-induced pulmonary artery perforation: pathologic
and pathogenic features. Hum Pathol 18:1246-1251, 1987
8. Smart FW, Husserl FE: Complications of flow-directed balloon-tipped
catheters. Chest 97:227-228, 1990
9. Carlson TA, Goldenberg IF, Murray PD, Tadavarthy SM, Walker M, Gobel
FL: Catheter-induced delayed recurrent pulmonary artery hemorrhage. intervention with
therapeutic embolism of the pulmonary artery. JAMA 261:1943-1945, 1989
10. Davis SD, Neithamer CD, Schreiber TS, Sos TA: False pulmonary
artery aneurysm induced by swan-ganz catheter: diagnosis and embolotherapy. Radiology
164:741-742, 1987
11. Kirton OC, Varon AJ, Henry RP, Civetta JM: Flow-directed,
pulmonary artery catheter-induced pseudoaneurysm: urgent diagnosis and endovascular
obliteration. Crit Care Med 20:1178-1180, 1992
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Successfully treated pulmonary artery rupture complicated by aneurysm formation. J
Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 6:70-72, 1992