Pulmonary Artery Catheter (PAC) 

1. Introduction

The Pulmonary Artery Catheter (PAC), commonly known as the Swan–Ganz catheter, is an advanced invasive hemodynamic monitoring tool that allows direct measurement of right-sided, pulmonary, and indirectly left-sided cardiac pressures, along with cardiac output and mixed venous oxygen saturation (SvO₂).

Although its routine use has declined, PAC remains invaluable in selected complex shock states, advanced heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, and post-cardiac surgery patients.


2. Historical Perspective

  • Developed in 1970 by Swan and Ganz
  • Revolutionized bedside hemodynamic assessment
  • Initially widely used later decline due to:
    • Invasive nature
    • Complication risk
    • No proven mortality benefit in unselected ICU populations

Key exam point: PAC does not improve mortality, but improves diagnostic accuracy and physiological understanding.


3. Structure of Pulmonary Artery Catheter

Length and Size

  • Length: 110 cm
  • Size: 7–8.5 Fr

Lumens and Ports

Lumen

Location

Function

Distal (PA port)

Pulmonary artery

PA pressure, PAOP

Proximal

Right atrium

CVP, injectate

Balloon lumen

Tip

Inflation for wedge

Thermistor

Near distal tip

Cardiac output

Fiberoptic (optional)

Distal

SvO


4. Route of Insertion

Venous Access

  • Right Internal Jugular vein (preferred)
  • Subclavian vein
  • Femoral vein (least preferred)

Pressure Waveform-Guided Advancement

Position

Pressure (mmHg)

Waveform

Right atrium

2–8

CVP waveform

Right ventricle

15–30 / 0–8

Sharp systolic

Pulmonary artery

15–30 / 8–15

Dicrotic notch

Wedge (PAOP)

6–12

Atrial waveform


5. Parameters Measured by PAC

A. Directly Measured

  1. Right Atrial Pressure (RAP / CVP)
  2. Right Ventricular Pressure
  3. Pulmonary Artery Pressure (PAP)
  4. Pulmonary Artery Occlusion Pressure (PAOP / PCWP)
  5. Cardiac Output (CO) – Thermodilution
  6. Mixed Venous Oxygen Saturation (SvO₂)


B. Derived Hemodynamic Variables

Variable

Formula

Normal

Cardiac Index

CO / BSA

2.5–4.0 L/min/m²

SVR

(MAP − RAP) / CO × 80

800–1200

PVR

(mPAP − PAOP) / CO × 80

<250

Stroke Volume

CO / HR

Oxygen Delivery (DO)

CO × CaO


6. Pulmonary Artery Occlusion Pressure (PAOP / PCWP)

What It Reflects

  • Indirect estimate of Left Atrial Pressure
  • Surrogate for LV end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) only if conditions are ideal

Normal Value

  • 6–12 mmHg

Conditions Where PAOP ≠ LVEDP

  • Mitral stenosis/regurgitation
  • Pulmonary venous disease
  • High PEEP
  • ARDS
  • Diastolic dysfunction
  • Elevated intra-thoracic pressure

Exam Pearl: PAOP ≠ preload in many ICU conditions.


7. Cardiac Output Measurement (Thermodilution)

Principle

  • Injection of cold saline temperature change detected by thermistor

Factors Affecting Accuracy

  • Tricuspid regurgitation
  • Intracardiac shunts
  • Rapid infusions
  • Mechanical ventilation
  • Arrhythmias


8. Mixed Venous Oxygen Saturation (SvO₂)

Normal Value

  • 65–75%

Physiological Determinants

  • Oxygen delivery
  • Oxygen consumption
  • Hemoglobin
  • Cardiac output

Interpretation

SvO

Interpretation

Low (<60%)

Low CO, hypovolemia, anemia, shock

High (>80%)

Sepsis, shunting, mitochondrial dysfunction

Key concept: SvO₂ reflects global oxygen balance, not tissue perfusion.


9. Clinical Indications for PAC (Selective Use)

A. Cardiogenic Shock

  • Post-MI
  • Severe LV failure
  • Mechanical complications

B. Complex Shock States

  • Mixed septic + cardiogenic shock
  • Refractory shock despite echo and dynamic indices

C. Severe Pulmonary Hypertension

  • RV failure
  • Pre-transplant evaluation

D. Advanced Heart Failure

  • Transplant/LVAD work-up
  • Inotrope titration

E. Post-Cardiac Surgery

  • Unstable hemodynamics
  • RV dysfunction

Not for routine sepsis management


10. PAC in Shock – Hemodynamic Profiles

Shock Type

CVP

PAOP

CO

SVR

SvO

Hypovolemic

Cardiogenic

Septic (early)

/N

/N

Obstructive

N/


11. Complications of PAC

Mechanical

  • Pneumothorax
  • Arterial puncture
  • Arrhythmias (RV irritation)

Catheter-Related

  • Pulmonary artery rupture (fatal)
  • Thrombosis
  • Infection
  • Knotting
  • Valve injury

Pressure-Related

  • Over-wedging pulmonary infarction

Never inflate balloon with >1.5 mL air


12. PAC vs Echocardiography vs Dynamic Indices

Modality

Strength

Limitation

PAC

Continuous, quantitative

Invasive

Echo

Structural + functional

Operator dependent

PPV/SVV

Fluid responsiveness

Needs strict conditions

Modern ICU approach: Echo first PAC only if uncertainty persists.


13. Evidence & Controversies

  • ESCAPE Trial: No mortality benefit
  • PAC does not worsen outcomes when used by experienced clinicians
  • Poor outcomes often due to misinterpretation, not the device