279 - DVT and Pulmonary Embolism Flashcards
Classical presentation of PE
- Sudden onset pleuritic chest pain
- Breathlessness
- Haemoptysis
- Postural giddiness
- Syncope
Massive PE may present as cardiac arrest or shock
Suspect in all patients with risk factors of DVT
Atypical presentation of PE
- Unexplained breathlessness
- Unexplained hypotension
- Syncope only
Signs of PE
- Fever (often mild)
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnoea
- Postural hypotension
- Cyanosis (large PE)
- Pleural rub or effusion
- Signs of DVT or thrombophlebitis
Features of Cor Pulmonale
- JVP prominent “a” wave
- TR: pansystolic murmur over tricuspid
- Parasternal heave
- S3
- Loud P2 with wide splitting
- PR: diastolic murmur over pulmonary
Post-pulmonary embolism syndrome
Persistent dyspnoea
Fatigue
Reduced effort tolerance
Persistent right ventricular dysfunction on echocardiogram
Risk of developing chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
Describe the pathophysiology of formation of VTE
- Predisposing Factors
A. Risk factors: cancer, obesity, smoking, hypertension, COPD, CKD, long distance travel, air pollution, OCP, pregnancy, hormonal replacement, surgery, trauma, sedentary lifestyle
(Watching TV each 2H per day increases 40% likelihood of fatal PE)
B. Prothrombic state
- Autosomal dominant mutations: Factor V leiden, prothrombin gene mutation
- ATIII, protein C, protein S deficiency
- ALPS
- Precipitating Factors (acute events)
- Inflammation: UC/Crohns’, RA, psoriasis, atherosclerosis, pneumonia, ACS, stroke, sepsis, erythropoietin, transfusion, cancer - Virchow’s triad leads to recruitment of activated platelets
A. Endothelial injury from inflammation
(arterial plaque -> endothelial injury and inflammation ->x2 likely to get VTE, and conversely VTE x2 to get CVS diseases)
B. Hypercoagulability state
C. Venous stasis - Activated platelets
- Activated platelets release proinflammatory mediators, bind to neutrophils and stimulate neutrophil extracellular traps
- Histones stimulate platelet aggregation and platelet-dependent thrombin generation
- Venous thrombi form and fluorish furhter in stasis, low oxygen tension and proinflammatory states - Embolisation
- DVT detach from site of formation
PE: -> vena cava -> RA/RV -> pulmonary circulation
Stroke: PFO or ASD -> left heart circulation -> brain
Describe the pathophysiology of pulmonary embolism
- Increased dead space -> gas exchange abnormalities (hypoxaemia and increased alveolar-arterial O2 tension gradient)
- Anatomical dead space: breathed gas does not enter gas exhcange units of lung
- Physiological dead space: ventilation to gas exchange units exceed venous blood flow through pulmonary capillaries - Increased pulmonary vascular resistance (obstruction or vasoconstriction)
- Vascular obstruction or platelet secretion of vasoconstricting neurohumoral agents (serotonin)
-> ventilation-perfusion mismatch, even remote from embolus
(explains discordance between small PE and large gradient) - Impaired gas exchange
- Increased alveolar dead space from vascular obstruction, hypoxaemia from hypoventilation relative to perfusion of non-obstructed lung, right to left shunting
- Impaired carbon monoxide transfer - Alveolar hyperventilation
- Reflex stimulation of irritant receptors - Increased airway resistance
- Constriction of airways distal to bronchi - Reduced pulmonary compliance
- Lung oedema, haemorrhage or loss of surfactant - RV dysfunction and microinfarcts -> pulmonary hypertension
- PA obstruction and neurohumoral mediators increases pulmonary arterial pressure and vascular resistance
- RV wall tension rises, dilates RV and causes dysfunction
- Release of cardiac biomarkers (troponin, BNP)
- Interventricular septum bulging and compresses LV and right coronary artery
- Diastolic LV dysfunction -> impaires LV filling and reduced CO, hypotension -> circulatory collapse
- Right coronary artery ischaemia -> RV microinfarct, further releasing cardiac biomarkers
Multiple whammy in resuscitation of massive PE
- Fluid resuscitation
- Intubation
- Inotropes
- ECMO
- Fluid resuscitation - judicious, replete with +/- 500mL
- Excessive fluid resuscitation exacerbates RV wall stress, more profound RV ischaemia, interventricular septal compression on LV worsens LV compliance and filling.
-> Worsened hypotension and cardiac output - Intubation - trial BiPAP preferred first (drowsy/low GCS unable to maintain airway)
- Pre/post-intubation medication causes profound hypotension further worsening circulation
- Intubation and positive airway pressure increases intrathroacic pressure, reduces venous return -> hypotension
- May lead to pericardiac/cardiac arrest - Inotrope - noradrenaline and dobutamine preferred
- NA: increases RV inotropy and blood pressure, restores coronary perfusion gradient
- Dobutamine: increases RV inotrophy, BUT lowers filling pressure and hypotension (must be used in conjunction with another vasopressor) - Consider ECMO as bridge to thrombolysis or embolectomy