2. CATHETERIZATION LABORATORY
A catheterization laboratory or
Cath lab is an examination room in
a hospital or clinic with diagnostic
imaging equipment used to
visualize the arteries of the heart
and the chambers of the heart
and treat any stenosis or
abnormality found.
3. Aim and Objectives
⢠To provide a high-quality
diagnostics and interventional
service for patients.
⢠To provide comfortable
environment for patients that
maintains both privacy and dignity.
4. Importance of Cath Lab
ď Diagnosing and fixing problems.
ďTo evaluate or to confirm the presence of coronary artery disease.
ďTo determine the need for further treatment.
ďFor integrated patient care.
ďFor multi-departmental approach.
5. Types of Cath Lab
1. Single plane Cath. Lab.
2. Bi-plane Cath. Lab.
6. Location
⢠Traditionally near the diagnostic radiology suite.
⢠Close to surgical suite
⢠No cross traffic and no interference with other
departments.
10. Elements of Cath lab
Catherization procedure room
Control/ Console Room
Patient holding room, preferably equipped with ECG monitors
Technicians work room
Dark room for 35mm film, if necessary
Equipment storage room for defibrillator, echo-cardiograph and other equipment
Film viewing area for cardiologists
Scrub area
Storage space for case carts
Alcove for wheelchairs and stretchers
Clean and soiled utility room
Toilets
12. Lightning , Electrical And Air Conditioning
⢠Light should be powerful ,
Ceiling mounted , cold light,
shadow less focusable beam
⢠Cold light , even distribution
⢠All electrical outlets should be
sparkles fittings
⢠CENTRAL AC : 18-22 °C
⢠AIR CHANGE : 20times/hour
with recycled air of which 5
times with the recycled air
⢠Humidity : 50-60%
13. Design
Considerations
⢠Absolute Minimum for Existing Facilities: 850 net
square feet (78.97 net square meters) (29â-0â x 29â-
0â), 24â-0â min dimension
⢠New and Existing Facilities: 900 net square feet
(83.61 net square meters) (29â-0â x 31â-0â), 24â-0â
min dimension.
⢠Control Room: 190 net square feet preferred, 120
NSF minimum
⢠Equipment Room: Minimum 120 net square feet
and accessible from the Control Room or the
restricted corridor and not accessible from the
procedure room
⢠Scrub station should be located adjacent to the
entry door of the Laboratory.
14. Planning
Parameters:
⢠Convenient functional flow between related
departments like ICU,CCU etc.
⢠Avoidance of outdoor noise & unrelated
hospital traffic flow
⢠Sliding doors & smooth, non-slippery floors
⢠Ceilings should be painted with washable
paints
⢠Provision of high speed autoclaves & X â
ray films illuminators
28. Procedures Performed in the Catheterization Laboratory
⢠Diagnostic procedures
Diagnostic cardiac catheterization:
A catheter is inserted through the skin (percutaneous) into an artery,
usually in the upper thigh or wrist, and then is threaded through the
body's arterial highway to the heart, where a special dye is injected
into the coronary arteries to reveal any possible blockages.
Biopsy:
A diagnostic procedure to obtain a myocardial tissue sample from the
ventricle of the heart aid in the detection of a disease process (i.e.,
myocarditis, cardiomyopathy, etc.) or to monitor rejection after heart
transplant.
30. NEURO CATHLAB
Neuro Cath lab is a diagnostic equipment for performing cerebral
angiography.
Angiography is an X Ray based procedure in which a contrast medium
is injected in the blood stream, which allows to create a clear picture
of blood vessel so that doctor can identify any blockages or
abnormalities.
31. Along with Brain Tumors this advanced Neuro Cath lab
helps to accurately diagnose all types of vascular
malfunctions in the brain such as:
ďStroke
ďAneurysm
ďAtherosclerosis
ďVasculitis or inflammation of the blood vessels
ďBlood Clots
ďTears in the lining of an artery- Dissection
32. Peripheral Catheterization
⢠A peripheral catheterization is a
procedure used to detect certain
upper and lower peripheral
extremity conditions. During this
procedure, a long, thin, flexible tube
is inserted into the blood vessel
either in your arm or in the groin and
passed through to the neck. This
catheter allows the doctors access to
perform procedures on the
peripherals.
34. The Cath Lab team
⢠Attending Physician
⢠Fellow
⢠Physicians assistant
⢠Nurse
⢠Cath lab tech
35. Coordination with other Departments
⢠Radiology department
⢠Laboratory
⢠Neurology department
⢠CSSD
⢠Cardiac OT
⢠Cardiac ICU
⢠Wards
⢠Stores
⢠Biomedical unit
⢠Billing Department
36. RECORD
KEEPING
⢠While writing a record we need to ask
ourselves, who is to refer these records.
Records from the Cath lab are referred
majorly by the following groups:
⢠Lawyers
⢠The hospital billing and quality control
team
⢠The medical care givers i.e. doctors,
interns and the nurses.
37. Information
provided in
the records
The Lawyer: They hope
to use the information
to address questions on
the standards of care
and medical errors.
The billing and quality
assurance: need to
understand what has
been done for the
patient, and the
indications for the
procedures and how
they were performed.
The medical caregivers:
want to know what the
status of the patient was
at the time of the
procedure.
39. CASE STUDY
The study examined the effects of new policies
implemented in the Cath lab in June 2014. The policies
resulted from an analysis of Cath lab workflow that
include creating a process flowchart that outlined and
time-stamped every step in a typical patientâs care. Thus
removing the issues that obstruct work-efficiency.
40. The following changes were implemented
ďśTransition from a âblockâ to a âpyramidalâ nursing schedule to ensure that more nurses
would be available early in the day. As these hours are preferred for performing
procedures.
ďśIncreased use of an electronic scheduling system that is accessible on any computer and
is displayed in each cath lab room, enabling immediate communication amongst team
members.
ďśReducing barriers to patient transfer through increased use of a âprepâ and holding area.
ďśEstablishing a central supply system to reduce time spent for searching equipment.
ďśDowngrading priority to physicians whose cases were not began within 15-30 minutes
of being paged/informed.
41. RESULTS
⢠Procedure start time improved
⢠Mean time between cases was
reduced.
⢠Proportion of full lab usage days
increased.
**Also to be noted there was no increase in
weekend, after-hours or overtime shifts, and
improvements were observed in all measured
aspects of Cath lab employee experience.**
42. Quality
Control
Improvement
(QCI)
The equipment that need to
be quality controlled includes:
⢠AVOXimeter
⢠Hemochron
⢠Defibrillator
⢠Fluoroscopic and imaging systems
⢠Personal protection equipment
⢠Climate control
⢠Medical gases
⢠Emergency equipment and
equipment necessary to perform
patient care