Abstract
Pulmonary arterial wedge pressure measures the pressure where blood flow resumes on the venous side. By occlusion of a large artery, the point where blood flow resumes will be in or near the left atrium. However, by occlusion of a small artery, it is possible to shift the point where flow resumes to a more proximal site in the veins and thus measure a pressure within the small veins. Increased pulmonary venous pressure, as a result of partial obstruction in the large veins, may not be detected by wedging a Swan-Ganz catheter in a large artery but may be detected by wedging in a small artery. We demonstrated this phenomenon in open-chest dogs by mechanically obstructing the left lower lobar vein or by infusing histamine to cause a generalized pulmonary venoconstriction. The wedge pressure measured by a 7-F Swan-Ganz catheter, with its balloon inflated in the main left lower lobar artery, nearly equaled left atrial pressure. On the other hand, the wedge pressure measured with a 7-F, 5-F, or a PE-50 catheter advanced into a small artery (without a balloon) was considerably higher than left atrial pressure. These results suggest that high resistance in the pulmonary veins can be demonstrated with the Swan-Ganz catheter by comparing the pressures obtained with the catheter wedged in a small and large artery.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
40 articles.
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