Pericardial Window
| Anesthesia type |
General |
|---|---|
| Airway |
ETT |
| Lines and access |
PIV x2 Arterial line (if tamponade physiology or instability) Central line only if necessary (do not delay drainage) |
| Monitors |
Standard ASA Invasive arterial BP +/- CVP TEE |
| Primary anesthetic considerations | |
| Preoperative |
-Determine presence and severity of tamponade physiology -Identify etiology (malignancy, uremia, infection, post-cardiac surgery, trauma) -Assess degree of sympathetic compensation -Evaluate anticoagulation |
| Intraoperative |
-Avoid loss of sympathetic tone -Avoid reductions in preload -Avoid sudden increases in intrathoracic pressure -Surgeon scrubbed and ready before induction if unstable |
| Postoperative |
-Hemodynamic instability after decompression -Acute RV failure -Re-expansion pulmonary edema -Reaccumulation of effusion |
| Article quality | |
| Editor rating | |
| User likes | 0 |
A pericardial window creates a surgical communication between the pericardial space and pleural or peritoneal cavity to allow continuous drainage of pericardial fluid. It is indicated for symptomatic effusions, cardiac tamponade, purulent pericarditis, recurrent malignant effusions, and failed percutaneous drainage.
From an anesthesia standpoint, the central issue is tamponade physiology, not the incision itself.
Overview
Indications
- Cardiac tamponade
- Symptomatic moderate-to-large effusion
- Recurrent effusion after percutaneous drainage
- Malignant effusion
- Purulent pericarditis
Unlike percutaneous pericardiocentesis, a pericardial window provides:
- Ongoing drainage
- Lower recurrence rates
- Ability to obtain pericardial biopsy
- Direct visualization of bleeding or loculations
Surgical procedure
Most common approach for urgent tamponade is via subxiphoid. A small infraxiphoid incision is made and the retrosternal space is entered bluntly. The anterior pericardium is identified, opened sharply, and a segment of pericardium is excised to create a window. Fluid is evacuated, often sent for cytology, culture, or pathology, and a drain is left in the pericardial space.
In a left anterior thoracotomy or VATS approach, the chest is entered through the left pleural space. The pericardium is opened anterior to the phrenic nerve, and a segment is resected so that fluid drains directly into the pleural cavity. A chest tube is placed.
Preoperative management
Patient evaluation
| System | Considerations |
|---|---|
| Airway | |
| Neurologic | |
| Cardiovascular | |
| Pulmonary | |
| Gastrointestinal | |
| Hematologic | |
| Renal | |
| Endocrine | |
| Other |
Labs and studies
Operating room setup
Patient preparation and premedication
Regional and neuraxial techniques
Intraoperative management
Monitoring and access
Induction and airway management
Positioning
Maintenance and surgical considerations
Emergence
Postoperative management
Disposition
Pain management
Potential complications
Procedure variants
| Variant 1 | Variant 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Unique considerations | ||
| Indications | ||
| Position | ||
| Surgical time | ||
| EBL | ||
| Postoperative disposition | ||
| Pain management | ||
| Potential complications |
References
Top contributors: Zining Chen