SoCCC Pre-Rounds: Bite-Sized Critical Care Cardiology Topics Delivered By Experts

The Basics of the Pulmonary Artery Catheter with Dr. Aniket Rali

Feb 6, 2026
Dr. Aniket Rali, a dual-trained heart failure and critical care cardiologist at Vanderbilt who teaches bedside hemodynamics, walks through pulmonary artery catheter fundamentals. He covers when to use PACs for unclear shock, who should avoid them, waveform recognition, leveling/zeroing and troubleshooting, and practical tips for safe placement and daily monitoring.
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INSIGHT

PAC Provides Diagnostic Hemodynamic Clarity

  • A pulmonary artery catheter (Swan-Ganz) gives a comprehensive hemodynamic profile to define shock etiology.
  • It helps distinguish cardiogenic, septic, hemorrhagic, or obstructive causes and which ventricle is failing.
ADVICE

Avoid PACs With Intracardiac Infection Or Thrombus

  • Avoid PACs when intravascular or endocardial material risks embolization, such as tricuspid or pulmonary valve endocarditis and right-sided thrombus.
  • Do not place a PAC through a proximal pulmonary embolus or when mechanical valves obstruct safe passage.
ADVICE

Use Imaging For High-Risk Or Difficult Placements

  • Consider fluoroscopic placement for patients with arrhythmogenic RVs or wide-open tricuspid regurgitation.
  • Use imaging when bedside blind floatation risks VT induction or prolonged unsuccessful placement.
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