Doppler signs of cardiac tamponade
Doppler signs of cardiac tamponade
Doppler signs of cardiac tamponade
Doppler Echocardiographic Signs of Cardiac Tamponade
Cardiac tamponade causes exaggerated ventricular interdependence due to pericardial constraint, which is well reflected in Doppler studies. These Doppler changes are considered the echo equivalent of pulsus paradoxus.
1. Mitral Inflow (Transmitral E-wave)
- Normal: Minimal respiratory variation (<10%).
- Tamponade:
- Inspiratory decrease >25% in peak E-wave velocity.
- Due to reduced LV filling when RV expands in inspiration.
2. Tricuspid Inflow (Transtricuspid E-wave)
- Normal: Small increase in inspiration.
- Tamponade:
- Inspiratory increase >40% in peak E-wave velocity.
- Due to augmented RV filling during inspiration.
3. Pulmonary Vein Doppler
- Tamponade:
- Decreased systolic forward flow with inspiration.
- Reflects impaired LV filling.
4. Hepatic Vein Doppler
- Tamponade:
- Expiratory diastolic flow reversal is a classic sign.
- Reflects impaired RV filling during expiration.
5. LV Outflow Tract (Aortic Flow)
- Tamponade:
- Inspiratory decrease in LV outflow velocity (>10%).
- Reflects reduced stroke volume with inspiration.
✅ Summary Table of Doppler Findings
Doppler Site | Normal | Tamponade Change |
---|---|---|
Mitral inflow (E-wave) | <10% resp. variation | ↓ >25% in inspiration |
Tricuspid inflow (E-wave) | Mild ↑ in inspiration | ↑ >40% in inspiration |
Pulmonary vein | Normal forward flow | ↓ systolic forward flow in inspiration |
Hepatic vein | Forward diastolic flow | Expiratory diastolic flow reversal |
LVOT / Aortic flow | <10% variation | ↓ in inspiration (>10%) |
👉 Take-home:
On Doppler, tamponade is characterized by marked respiratory variation in mitral and tricuspid inflows, expiratory hepatic vein flow reversal, and decreased aortic flow in inspiration, all reflecting exaggerated ventricular interdependence.
Summary Table: Doppler Signs in Cardiac Tamponade
Point | Doppler Finding | Key Feature / Threshold | Clinical Importance |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mitral inflow (E-wave) | Inspiratory ↓ >25% | Echo equivalent of pulsus paradoxus |
2 | Tricuspid inflow (E-wave) | Inspiratory ↑ >40% | Reflects RV dominance in inspiration |
3 | Pulmonary vein flow | Inspiratory ↓ in systolic forward flow | Impaired LV filling |
4 | Hepatic vein Doppler | Expiratory diastolic flow reversal | RV restriction during expiration |
5 | LVOT / Aortic flow | Inspiratory ↓ >10% | Reduced LV stroke volume |
6 | RVOT / Pulmonic flow | Expiratory ↓ >10% | Reflects interventricular dependence |
7 | Inspiratory variation | exaggerated (>25–40%) | Hallmark of tamponade |
8 | Normal transmitral variation | <10% | Helps distinguish normal from abnormal |
9 | Normal transtricuspid variation | <25% | Helps define cutoff |
10 | SVC Doppler | ↓ forward flow in expiration | Supports diagnosis |
11 | IVC Doppler | Blunted variation | Consistent with venous congestion |
12 | Mitral A-wave | Inspiratory reduction | Secondary LV filling compromise |
13 | Tissue Doppler (mitral annulus) | Exaggerated respiratory variation | Confirms ventricular interdependence |
14 | Hepatic systolic flow | Blunted or reversed | Severe tamponade |
15 | Doppler hallmark | Exaggerated respiratory variation | Equivalent to pulsus paradoxus |
16 | Severity correlation | More pronounced changes = severe tamponade | Guides urgency |
17 | Loculated effusion | May cause atypical Doppler patterns | Requires correlation |
18 | Constriction vs tamponade | Constriction → preserved expiratory hepatic flow reversal | Differentiates pathologies |
19 | Timing | Doppler changes occur before overt hemodynamic collapse | Early diagnosis |
20 | Integration | Must combine with effusion + chamber collapse | Essential for accurate diagnosis |
📘 10 Short Q&A Block: Doppler Findings in Tamponade
Q1. What is the hallmark Doppler sign of tamponade?
👉 Exaggerated respiratory variation in transvalvular flows.
Q2. What is the cutoff for inspiratory decrease in mitral inflow (E-wave)?
👉 >25%.
Q3. What is the cutoff for inspiratory increase in tricuspid inflow (E-wave)?
👉 >40%.
Q4. What pulmonary vein Doppler change is seen in tamponade?
👉 Inspiratory decrease in systolic forward flow.
Q5. What hepatic vein Doppler change is typical of tamponade?
👉 Expiratory diastolic flow reversal.
Q6. What change occurs in aortic LVOT flow during inspiration?
👉 >10% decrease in velocity.
Q7. What RVOT (pulmonic) Doppler change occurs in expiration?
👉 >10% decrease in velocity.
Q8. What is the normal transmitral inflow respiratory variation?
👉 Less than 10%.
Q9. How does tissue Doppler behave in tamponade?
👉 Shows exaggerated respiratory variation in mitral annular velocities.
Q10. How to differentiate tamponade from constrictive pericarditis on Doppler?
👉 Tamponade: inspiratory changes dominate;
👉 Constriction: expiratory hepatic flow reversal is more typical.
