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18 May 2026

Cardiac Tamponade After Late Central Venous Catheter Dislodgement in Two Pediatric Patients—A Rare but Potentially Fatal Complication

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1
Pediatrics Clinic, St. George University Hospital, 4002 Plovdiv, Bulgaria
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Department of Pediatrics, Medical University of Plovdiv, 4002 Plovdiv, Bulgaria
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Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Children2026, 13(5), 689;https://doi.org/10.3390/children13050689 
(registering DOI)
This article belongs to the Section Pediatric Emergency Medicine & Intensive Care Medicine

Abstract

Background: Cardiac tamponade (CT) is a rare but life-threatening medical emergency caused by fluid accumulation in the pericardial sac, impairing cardiac filling and reducing output. More than 20% of CT cases are iatrogenic. CT is a recognized complication of central venous catheter (CVC) placement, with mortality rates in pediatric patients reported to reach 50%. Clinical presentation is often nonspecific, and echocardiography remains the diagnostic gold standard. Case report: We present two pediatric cases of CT due to late CVC migration, managed in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). The first case involved a 25-day-old neonate with short bowel syndrome who received prolonged parenteral nutrition via CVC. Four days after catheter insertion, the patient developed sudden cardiocirculatory collapse. The second case featured a 2-year-old child with Leigh syndrome who required mechanical ventilation and multimodal pharmacological therapy. Six days after CVC placement, the patient developed acute hemodynamic deterioration. In both cases, echocardiography confirmed CT, while chest radiography suggested intracardiac positioning of the catheter tip. Management and outcome: Emergency pericardiocentesis and advanced cardiopulmonary resuscitation were performed. Despite transient hemodynamic stabilization, both patients developed multiorgan failure with fatal outcomes. Conclusion: CT is a critical complication in pediatric patients with CVCs. Accurate verification of catheter tip position is essential, and intracardiac placement should be avoided. Any sudden clinical deterioration in a patient with a CVC should raise suspicion of late catheter migration and requires immediate life-saving intervention.

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