Surgical approach
- Emergency decompression options depend on cause and setting
- Pericardiocentesis (often US-guided): aspirate pericardial fluid; may leave pericardial drain
- Subxiphoid pericardial window: incision below xiphoid, open pericardium, evacuate clot/fluid, place drain
- Thoracotomy / sternotomy (trauma or post-cardiac surgery): open chest, evacuate clot, control bleeding, repair cardiac injury
- Post-cardiac surgery tamponade: return to theatre for re-sternotomy; evacuate clot, identify bleeding point, washout, drains
- Key surgical priorities
- Rapid decompression and restoration of venous return
- Treat underlying cause (bleeding, malignancy, infection, iatrogenic perforation)
Anaesthetic management (typical for emergency drainage/window)
- Type of anaesthesia
- Often GA for surgical window/thoracotomy; local + sedation may be used for pericardiocentesis in cooperative, non-crashing patients
- Avoid neuraxial/major sympathectomy techniques in unstable tamponade (risk of precipitous collapse)
- Airway
- ETT usually required for GA and any thoracotomy/sternotomy; SGA generally inappropriate in severe instability/need for controlled ventilation and rapid access
- Maintain spontaneous ventilation if possible until decompression in severe tamponade (positive pressure ventilation can reduce venous return)
- Duration
- Pericardiocentesis: ~15–45 min (plus ongoing drainage/monitoring)
- Pericardial window: ~45–90 min (variable)
- Thoracotomy/sternotomy for trauma/post-op bleeding: unpredictable; can be prolonged
- How painful
- Pericardiocentesis: mild–moderate (local anaesthetic essential)
- Pericardial window/thoracotomy: severe; plan multimodal analgesia (opioid, paracetamol ± ketamine), consider regional only once haemodynamics stable and coagulation acceptable
- Monitoring and access
- Full AAGBI monitoring; arterial line ideally before induction if time and patient tolerates
- Large-bore IV access; consider rapid infuser; crossmatch blood if haemorrhagic cause suspected
- Central line: may be difficult/low yield acutely; high CVP is expected and not reassuring; avoid delaying decompression
- Bedside echo/TOE where available to confirm diagnosis and guide drainage; can be used intra-op to assess resolution
Definition and key concept
- Cardiac tamponade = haemodynamically significant pericardial pressure causing impaired diastolic filling → reduced stroke volume and cardiac output
- Severity depends on: volume, rate of accumulation, pericardial compliance (acute small volume can be catastrophic; chronic effusions can be large)
Aetiology (high-yield)
- Trauma: penetrating/blunt; haemopericardium
- Iatrogenic: central line/EP procedures, PCI, pacemaker leads, TAVI, myocardial rupture post-MI
- Post-cardiac surgery: clot tamponade (often localized) and may not present with classic signs
- Medical: malignancy, uraemia, TB/viral pericarditis, autoimmune, hypothyroidism, aortic dissection with rupture into pericardium
Pathophysiology (exam framework)
- Rising intrapericardial pressure → equalisation of diastolic pressures (RA/RV/LV) → impaired ventricular filling
- Compensation: sympathetic drive → tachycardia, increased SVR, increased contractility; venoconstriction to maintain preload
- Ventricular interdependence: inspiratory ↑ venous return to RV shifts septum left → ↓ LV filling → pulsus paradoxus
- Positive pressure ventilation (PPV) reduces venous return and can precipitate collapse; PEEP worsens
- Coronary perfusion may fall (hypotension + high pericardial pressure) → myocardial ischaemia and worsening function
Clinical features and signs
- Symptoms: dyspnoea, chest discomfort, anxiety, fatigue; may be sudden collapse in acute haemopericardium
- Beck’s triad: hypotension, raised JVP, muffled heart sounds (often incomplete, especially in ventilated/obese patients)
- Pulsus paradoxus: inspiratory fall in systolic BP >10 mmHg (may be absent with severe LV dysfunction, ASD, aortic regurgitation, or on PPV)
- Tachycardia, cool peripheries, narrow pulse pressure; Kussmaul’s sign is classically constriction (can overlap clinically)
- Post-op cardiac surgery: may present with low output, rising lactate, oliguria, unexplained hypotension; JVP and muffled sounds may be unhelpful; consider localized tamponade
Investigations (what to say in viva)
- ECG: sinus tachycardia; low voltage; electrical alternans (large effusion)
- CXR: enlarged cardiac silhouette (chronic effusion); may be normal in acute tamponade
- Echo (key test): pericardial effusion; RA systolic collapse; RV diastolic collapse; plethoric IVC with reduced respiratory variation; marked respiratory variation in transvalvular Doppler flows
- Invasive pressures (if present): elevated and equalised diastolic pressures; CVP high; arterial line may show pulsus paradoxus
- Bloods: FBC, coagulation, group & save/crossmatch; lactate; consider troponin if MI/mechanical complication suspected
Immediate management principles (before definitive drainage)
- Call for help early: cardiology/cardiothoracics, anaesthesia, ICU; prepare for rapid deterioration and peri-arrest
- Oxygen, head-up if tolerated; avoid delays to decompression
- Maintain preload: cautious fluid bolus (e.g. 250–500 mL) may temporise; avoid over-resuscitation if pulmonary oedema/poor LV function
- Support perfusion: vasopressor/inotrope as bridge (noradrenaline/adrenaline). Aim to maintain coronary perfusion pressure
- Avoid factors that reduce venous return: PPV/PEEP, deep sedation, vasodilation, hypovolaemia
- Treat reversible causes: stop anticoagulation if safe; reverse warfarin/DOAC as appropriate; correct coagulopathy if bleeding suspected
Anaesthetic goals (tamponade physiology)
- Maintain heart rate and contractility (CO is HR-dependent due to fixed stroke volume)
- Maintain preload and venous return
- Maintain SVR (avoid vasodilation); hypotension can be catastrophic
- Minimise increases in intrathoracic pressure: gentle ventilation, minimal PEEP; consider spontaneous ventilation until decompressed
Induction and intraoperative management (practical FRCA points)
- Preparation
- Resus drugs drawn up (adrenaline, noradrenaline/phenylephrine/metaraminol), push-dose vasopressor plan, defib pads on
- Blood available if haemopericardium/trauma; massive haemorrhage protocol readiness
- Two large-bore IVs, arterial line if feasible; consider rapid infuser and warming
- Choice of induction technique
- If crashing: consider local infiltration with minimal sedation for pericardiocentesis (avoid loss of sympathetic tone)
- If GA required: aim for haemodynamic stability; consider ketamine or etomidate; use small incremental doses; avoid large propofol doses
- Muscle relaxant: use if needed for intubation; be aware paralysis removes negative intrathoracic pressure from spontaneous breathing
- Ventilation strategy
- If ventilated: low mean airway pressure, minimal/zero PEEP, avoid hyperinflation; accept mild hypercapnia if necessary to reduce airway pressures
- Maintenance
- Balanced GA with cautious volatile/opioid; consider TIVA with careful titration; avoid vasodilation
- Vasopressor infusion early (noradrenaline) often required; adrenaline if poor contractility
- After decompression
- Expect rapid haemodynamic improvement; reduce vasopressors carefully
- Watch for arrhythmias, bleeding recurrence, and myocardial dysfunction
- Consider re-expansion pulmonary oedema / acute LV failure in chronic large effusions after rapid drainage (rare but important)
Peri-arrest and arrest in tamponade (ALS modifications)
- Tamponade is a reversible cause (4 Hs & 4 Ts): definitive treatment is immediate decompression
- If PEA with suspected tamponade: continue high-quality CPR, give adrenaline per ALS, and perform immediate pericardiocentesis / thoracotomy as indicated (especially traumatic arrest)
- Traumatic tamponade: resuscitative thoracotomy may be required (depending on mechanism, downtime, resources); pericardiocentesis may be temporising but can fail with clotted blood
Differentials to mention
- Tension pneumothorax (also obstructive shock; may coexist in trauma)
- Massive PE
- Constrictive pericarditis (similar physiology but chronic; Kussmaul’s more typical; echo/Doppler differences)
- Cardiogenic shock/MI, severe hypovolaemia, sepsis (distributive shock)
Postoperative/ICU considerations
- HDU/ICU for ongoing monitoring, especially if haemorrhagic cause, ongoing drainage, vasopressor requirement, or post-cardiac surgery
- Monitor for re-accumulation: recurrent hypotension, rising CVP, pulsus paradoxus, echo changes; ensure drain patency
- Treat underlying cause: malignancy work-up, infection/TB therapy, renal failure management, anticoagulation plan
Define cardiac tamponade and explain why small volumes can be fatal in acute cases.
Use a definition + compliance concept.
- Tamponade is haemodynamic compromise due to raised intrapericardial pressure causing impaired diastolic filling and reduced cardiac output.
- In acute accumulation, the pericardium is non-compliant: a small additional volume causes a steep rise in pressure, rapidly exceeding chamber filling pressures.
- In chronic effusions, pericardium stretches: large volumes may be tolerated before tamponade physiology develops.
Describe the haemodynamic changes in tamponade and how the body compensates.
- Primary problem: reduced ventricular filling → reduced stroke volume → reduced cardiac output.
- Compensation: sympathetic activation → tachycardia, increased contractility, increased SVR; venoconstriction to maintain preload.
- Late: hypotension, metabolic acidosis, myocardial ischaemia, PEA arrest.
What is pulsus paradoxus? Explain the mechanism and give situations where it may be absent.
- Definition: inspiratory fall in systolic BP >10 mmHg (or marked inspiratory decrease in arterial waveform amplitude).
- Mechanism: inspiration increases RV filling; fixed pericardial volume causes septal shift to the left → reduced LV filling and stroke volume.
- May be absent with: PPV, severe LV dysfunction, ASD, significant aortic regurgitation, profound hypovolaemia, or localized post-op tamponade.
List the clinical signs of tamponade and comment on their reliability.
- Beck’s triad: hypotension, raised JVP, muffled heart sounds (often incomplete).
- Tachycardia, narrow pulse pressure, pulsus paradoxus, dyspnoea, shock.
- Signs can be unreliable in ventilated patients, obesity, COPD, and post-cardiac surgery (localized tamponade).
What echocardiographic features support the diagnosis of tamponade?
- Pericardial effusion plus chamber collapse: RA systolic collapse and RV diastolic collapse.
- Plethoric IVC with reduced respiratory variation (raised right-sided pressures).
- Respiratory variation in Doppler inflow velocities (mitral/tricuspid) reflecting ventricular interdependence.
A patient with suspected tamponade needs urgent drainage. What are your anaesthetic goals?
- Maintain preload and venous return; avoid hypovolaemia and excessive PEEP/airway pressures.
- Maintain heart rate and contractility (CO is HR-dependent).
- Maintain SVR; avoid vasodilation and deep anaesthesia.
- Have vasopressors immediately available; plan for peri-arrest management and rapid decompression.
How does positive pressure ventilation affect tamponade and what is your ventilation strategy if you must intubate?
- PPV increases intrathoracic pressure → reduces venous return → worsens filling and can precipitate collapse.
- If intubated: use low tidal volumes as appropriate, minimal/zero PEEP, avoid high mean airway pressure, avoid hyperinflation; treat hypotension with vasopressors and fluid while expediting decompression.
Discuss induction agent choice in severe tamponade.
- Avoid large boluses of propofol/volatile due to vasodilation and myocardial depression.
- Consider ketamine (supports sympathetic tone) or etomidate (haemodynamic stability) with incremental dosing.
- Aim to preserve spontaneous ventilation until decompression when feasible; be ready with push-dose vasopressor and infusion.
Outline immediate management of PEA arrest where tamponade is suspected.
- Follow ALS: high-quality CPR, adrenaline, treat reversible causes; tamponade requires immediate decompression.
- Perform pericardiocentesis urgently (preferably US-guided) or resuscitative thoracotomy in traumatic arrest where indicated.
- Recognise pericardiocentesis may fail if blood is clotted (trauma/post-op).
How does post-cardiac surgery tamponade differ in presentation and management?
- Often localized clot causing regional chamber compression: classic Beck’s triad and pulsus paradoxus may be absent.
- May present as low cardiac output, rising lactate, oliguria, unexplained hypotension; echo/TOE is crucial.
- Definitive treatment is urgent return to theatre for re-sternotomy and clot evacuation; pericardiocentesis is usually not definitive.
What complications can occur after pericardial drainage and how would you manage them?
- Re-tamponade (blocked drain/re-bleed): recurrent shock; urgent reassessment and repeat drainage/surgery.
- Arrhythmias (atrial/ventricular): treat per ACLS; correct electrolytes/ischaemia.
- Acute LV failure/pulmonary oedema after rapid drainage of chronic large effusion: supportive ventilation, diuretics/vasodilators if tolerated, ICU.
- Procedure-related injury: coronary/ventricular puncture, pneumothorax, liver injury (manage per complication and involve surgical teams).
Explain the pathophysiology of cardiac tamponade and the effects of intermittent positive pressure ventilation.
- Raised pericardial pressure limits diastolic filling → fixed stroke volume; compensation via tachycardia and increased SVR.
- PPV/PEEP reduces venous return and increases RV afterload → worsens filling and may precipitate cardiovascular collapse.
- Management implication: preserve spontaneous ventilation where possible; if ventilating, keep airway pressures low and expedite drainage.
Discuss the anaesthetic management of a patient with cardiac tamponade requiring emergency pericardial window.
- Goals: maintain preload, HR/contractility, SVR; avoid vasodilation and PPV effects; vasopressors prepared.
- Monitoring: arterial line if feasible, large-bore IV access, blood available; echo/TOE support.
- Induction: incremental ketamine/etomidate; avoid propofol bolus; consider awake/LA drainage if crashing.
- Ventilation: minimal PEEP, low mean airway pressure; treat hypotension aggressively while surgeon decompresses.
Describe the clinical features and investigations of cardiac tamponade, and how you would differentiate it from tension pneumothorax and massive pulmonary embolism.
- Tamponade: raised JVP, hypotension, muffled heart sounds, pulsus paradoxus; echo diagnostic.
- Tension pneumothorax: unilateral reduced breath sounds, hyperresonance, tracheal deviation (late), high airway pressures on ventilation; treat immediately with decompression.
- Massive PE: acute dyspnoea, hypoxia, RV strain, possible clear chest; echo shows RV dilatation/strain; consider thrombolysis/embolectomy depending on context.
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