Pericardiocentesis
1️⃣ Basic Anatomy & Physiology
Pericardium
The pericardium has two layers:
- Fibrous pericardium – tough outer layer
- Serous pericardium
- Parietal layer
- Visceral layer (epicardium)
Normal pericardial fluid: 15–50 mL
3️⃣ Indications of Pericardiocentesis
🔴 Emergency (Absolute)
- Cardiac tamponade with hemodynamic instability
- PEA arrest with suspected tamponade
🟡 Urgent / Diagnostic
- Large symptomatic effusion
- Suspected bacterial / TB / malignant effusion
- Recurrent effusion
4️⃣ Contraindications
Absolute
- Aortic dissection (risk of worsening bleed)
Relative
- Uncorrected coagulopathy
- Severe thrombocytopenia
- Small posterior loculated effusion
⚠ In unstable tamponade → NO absolute contraindication
5️⃣ Pre-Procedure Evaluation
A. Echocardiography (Gold Standard)
Echo signs of tamponade:
- RA systolic collapse
- RV diastolic collapse
- IVC plethora
- Swinging heart
- Respiratory variation in mitral/tricuspid inflow
B. ECG Findings
- Low voltage QRS
- Electrical alternans
C. Labs
- CBC
- INR/PTT
- Platelets
- Crossmatch (if hemopericardium suspected)
6️⃣ Approaches to Pericardiocentesis
1️⃣ Subxiphoid (Most Common Traditional)
- Needle inserted 1–2 cm below xiphoid
- Directed toward left shoulder
- 30–45° angle
Advantages:
- Avoids pleura
- Safer in emergency
2️⃣ Parasternal Approach
- 5th–6th intercostal space
- Just left of sternum
- Avoid internal mammary artery
3️⃣ Apical Approach (Echo-Guided Preferred)
- Near cardiac apex
- Shortest distance to fluid
🔹 Current standard: Ultrasound-guided approach (AHA / ESC recommended)
7️⃣ Procedure – Step-by-Step (ICU Practical)
Preparation
- Informed consent (if possible)
- Resuscitation equipment ready
- Defibrillator attached
- Continuous ECG monitoring
Position
- Semi-recumbent (30°)
Technique (Seldinger Method – Preferred)
- Local anesthesia (lidocaine)
- Insert 18 G needle under echo guidance
- Aspirate fluid
- Insert guidewire
- Dilator
- Pigtail catheter placement
- Connect to drainage bag
- Always aspirate slowly
- Do not remove >1 L rapidly
- Leave catheter until <25–50 mL/day drainage
Confirm Placement
- Echo visualization
- Agitated saline injection (bubble study)
- ECG changes if myocardial contact
8️⃣ Fluid Analysis
Send for:
- Cell count
- Protein
- LDH
- Glucose
- ADA (TB suspicion)
- Gram stain
- Culture
- Cytology
- AFB stain
- PCR (if indicated)
Causes of Pericardial Effusion
|
Cause |
Typical Findings |
|
TB |
High ADA, lymphocytes |
|
Malignancy |
Hemorrhagic, positive cytology |
|
Uremia |
Sterile inflammatory |
|
Bacterial |
Neutrophils |
|
Autoimmune |
ANA positive |
|
Post-MI (Dressler) |
Inflammatory |
9️⃣ Complications
Immediate
- Arrhythmias (PVCs, VT)
- Coronary artery injury
- Myocardial puncture
- Pneumothorax
- Liver injury (subxiphoid)
Delayed
- Re-accumulation
- Infection
- Constrictive pericarditis
🔟 Pericardiocentesis vs Pericardial Window
|
Pericardiocentesis |
Pericardial Window |
|
Bedside |
OR procedure |
|
Temporary relief |
Definitive |
|
Recurrent effusion possible |
Lower recurrence |
1️⃣1️⃣ Special Situations
Trauma
- FAST positive + shock → immediate drainage
Aortic Dissection
- Avoid unless cardiac arrest (controversial)
Uremic Effusion
- Dialysis first unless tamponade
Post-Cardiac Surgery
- Often loculated → surgical drainage preferred
1️⃣2️⃣ Hemodynamic Effect After Drainage
- Sudden ↑ venous return
- Improved BP
- Decreased JVP
- Improved urine output
⚠ Rare complication: Pericardial decompression syndrome
- Acute LV failure
- Pulmonary edema
1️⃣3️⃣ Pericardial Decompression Syndrome
Mechanism:
- Sudden increase in venous return
- LV cannot adapt
- Acute pulmonary edema
Management:
- Supportive
- Diuretics
- Ventilation
1️⃣4️⃣ Exam-Trap Points
✔ Pulsus paradoxus absent in:
- Severe AR
- ASD
- Mechanical ventilation
✔ Electrical alternans = large effusion, not always tamponade
✔ RA collapse > 1/3 cardiac cycle = tamponade sign
✔ Tamponade is clinical diagnosis – echo supports

