ABC Heart Fail Cardiomyop 2022; 2(2): 212-213

Swan-Ganz Catheter and Lack of Evidence: Does it Reflect Clinical Practice?

Joana Carolina Junqueira de Brum, Luiz Claudio Danzmann ORCID logo

DOI: 10.36660/abchf.20220036

The physician is faced with a septuagenarian patient with chronic heart failure (HF) of severe ischemic etiology. She progresses with a major hemorrhagic complication after attempted percutaneous revascularization. In spite of volume compensation, she shows signs of respiratory infection, and, notwithstanding adequate antibiotic therapy, she continues to deteriorate clinically with signs of hypoperfusion, albeit with borderline blood pressure levels.

Would indication of invasive hemodynamic monitoring be scientifically associated with reduced clinical outcomes in this case? Acute clinical syndromes imply a greater degree of difficulty for conducting clinical trials, and some approaches applied in practice have not yet been tested in the ideal Cartesian model. The case described above seems to be a good justification for this discussion.

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Swan-Ganz Catheter and Lack of Evidence: Does it Reflect Clinical Practice?

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