A multipurpose catheter for electrophysiologic and hemodynamic monitoring plus atrial pacing.
Abstract
A new multipurpose flow-directed pulmonary arterial catheter has been developed and evaluated in 30 patients with acute cardiopulmonary dysfunction. The catheter permits monitoring of the bipolar atrial electrogram, pulmonary arterial or wedge pressure, central venous pressure, and cardiac output, plus atrial pacing. The standard Swan-Ganz thermistor-equipped catheter was modified to incorporate two ring electrodes on the shaft at 25 and 26 cm from the tip. With the pair of electrodes positioned in the right atrium at the junction with the superior vena cava, stable electrograms of high quality were recorded in all 30 subjects, some for as long as six days. These high-fidelity atrial electrograms permitted rapid and accurate diagnosis of many complex dysrhythmias in these unstable patients. Because of the limited noise in the signal of the electrogram, continuous quantitative measurements of intervals by a computerized system was feasible. Furthermore, the stable intracavitary position of electrodes provided a reliable site for atrial pacing, with pacing thresholds (2 to 12 ma; average, 5 ma) that remained stable for up to four days. Atrial pacing was used to treat sinus bradycardia, atrial tachyarrhythmias, digitalis intoxication, and ventricular dysrhythmias.







