A case report on ultrasound‐guided pericardiocentesis with a right parasternal approach: a novel in‐plane lateral‐to‐medial technique

Dublin Core

Title

A case report on ultrasound‐guided pericardiocentesis with a right parasternal approach: a novel in‐plane lateral‐to‐medial technique

Subject

Pericardiocentesis, Ultrasound-guided pericardiocentesis, High-frequency probe, In-plane technique,
Lateral-to-medial approach, Right parasternal access, Point-of-care ultrasound

Description

Introduction Emergency pericardiocentesis is a life-saving procedure that is performed to aspirate fluid
from the pericardial space in patients who have severe pericardial effusion that is causing hemodynamic compromise.
The current gold standard for pericardial fluid aspiration is ultrasound-guided pericardiocentesis. Echocardiography
with a low-frequency transducer has generally been used in pericardiocentesis, but this method lacks real-time

visualization of the needle trajectory, leading to complications. Therefore, we describe a case involving an ultrasound-
guided pericardiocentesis method using a novel in-plane technique with a lateral-to-medial approach via the right

parasternal and a high-frequency probe. The method was performed for an infant with cardiac tamponade.
Case presentation We present a case of a 14-month-old male infant who was brought to the emergency room
with a history of cough, shortness of breath, and fever following recurrent chest infections. Despite prior treatments,

his condition deteriorated, and signs of cardiac tamponade were evident upon examination. Cardiopulmonary point-
of-care ultrasound confirmed the presence of a large pericardial effusion with tamponade. Emergency pericardio‐

centesis was performed using the novel in-plane technique, resulting in successful fluid aspiration and stabilization
of the patient’s condition.
Technique description The proposed technique involves positioning a high-frequency ultrasound probe
over the right parasternal area to obtain real-time visualization of the needle trajectory and surrounding structures,
including the sternum, right internal thoracic vessels, pleural sliding end point, pericardial effusion, and myocardium.
The needle is inserted laterally to medially at a 45-degree angle, ensuring safe passage between the pleural sliding
endpoint and the right internal thoracic vessels while reaching the pericardial effusion.
Conclusion The presented technique provides real-time visualization of the needle and surrounding struc‐
tures, which may potentially help to avoid complications and improve accuracy. The proposed technique may
potentially enable access for emergency pericardiocentesis and for loculated pericardial effusion that has formed
around the right atrium. Nevertheless, further studies with large patient populations are needed.
Keywords Pericardiocentesis, Ultrasound-guided pericardiocentesis, High-frequency probe, In-plane technique,
Lateral-to-medial approach, Right parasternal access, Point-of-care ultrasound

Creator

Najem Abdullah Mohammed1,2,3*, Tanweer A. Al‐zubairi1,2 and Moad H. Al‐soumai1,2

Source

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12245-024-00592-7

Date

2024

Contributor

Peri Irawan

Format

pdf

Language

english

Type

text

Files

Citation

Najem Abdullah Mohammed1,2,3*, Tanweer A. Al‐zubairi1,2 and Moad H. Al‐soumai1,2, “A case report on ultrasound‐guided pericardiocentesis with a right parasternal approach: a novel in‐plane lateral‐to‐medial technique,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 11, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/12271.