PE Flashcards
Definition?
Consequence of venous thrombosis formation in the distal venous system, leading to obstruction of the pulmonary vessels.
RFs?
• Dyspnoea • Active cancer • Recent surgery or hospitalisation • Previous DVT • Pregnancy Immobilisation
ddx?
• Unstable angina-ST depression
• NSTEMI-high troponin, ST depression
• STEMI- ST elevation ,high troponin, central chest pain
• Pneumonia-cough with sputum, high infection and consolidation on CXR
• Bronchitis-cough ,wheezes high D dimer and normal CXR
• COPD-wheeze, low breath sounds, CXR signs, RV dysfunction
• Asthma-wheezes, normal results, less breath sounds
• CHF-dyspnoea, tackles, signs of HF
• Pericarditis-fever, pain on sitting up,ST elevation,
• Cardiac tamponade-hypotension, muffled heart sounds, high JVP, effusion
• Pulmonary hypertension-oedema, right axis deviation on ECG
• Pneumothorax-tracheal deviation, hyper resonance
• Costochondritis-chest pain breathing in, tenderness,
Panic attack -faint, palpitations , fear
Epidemiology?
Age: >50
Sex:male
Ethnicity:
Aetiology?
• Vessel wall damage
• Venous stasis
Hypercoagulability
CP?
- Dyspnoea
- Chest pain- pleuritic/worse with inspiration
- Signs of DVT
- Risk factors
- Hypoxaemia
- Meets PERC rules
- Positive Wells score
- Tachycardia
- Acute RV dysfunction
- Syncope
- Haemoptysis
- Dullness on percussion
- Split second heart sound
- Fever
PERC rule?
>50 HR >100 O2<95% PMH? trauma or surgery? exogenous oestrogen use? haemoptysis? unilateral leg swelling?
Wells score for PE?
signs? surgery or immobile>3 weeks PMH HR>100 haemoptysis active cancer
Pathophysiology?
• Mechanism:thrombus formation(seeVirchow’s triad)→deep vein thrombosisin the legs orpelvis(most commonlyiliacvein)→ embolizationtopulmonary arteriesviainferior vena cava→ partialor complete obstruction ofpulmonary arteries
• Pathophysiologic response of thelungto arterial obstruction
• Infarctionandinflammationof thelungsandpleura
○ Causespleuriticchest painandhemoptysis
○ Leads tosurfactantdysfunction→atelectasis→ ↓PaO2
○ Triggers respiratory drive→hyperventilationandtachypnea→respiratory alkalosiswithhypocapnia(↓PaCO2)
○ Impairedgas exchange
§ Mechanical vessel obstruction→ventilation-perfusionmismatch→ arterialhypoxemia(↓PaO2) and elevatedA-a gradient(see “Diagnostics” below)
§ Cardiac compromise
□ Elevatedpulmonary arterypressure (PAP) due to blockage→ rightventricular pressure overload→ forwardfailure with decreasedcardiac output→hypotensionandtachycardia
• Increased-decreased perfusion or over-ventilation-too much oxygen, not enough blood to diffuse into-Increased V/Q
Investigations?
- CTPA-can see thrombus RV enlargement and diameter greater than 0.9
- Echo-abnormal ejection or contractility, dilation,tricuspid regurgitation, pulmonary hypertension,thrombus
- D dimer-Elevated,low specificity but high sensitivity
- FBC-thrombocytopenia,anaemia,polycythaemia
- ECG-sinus tachycardia,right BBB,S1Q3T3,atrial arrhythmias,ST/T wave abnormalities,right axis deviation,P pulmonale
- U &E-normal
- Coagulation studies-choice of anticoagulation
- LFTS-choice of anticoagulation
- ABG-hypoxaemia,hypocapnia,
- CXR-atelectasis,pleural effusion,hemidiaphragm,
- Venous US-cannot be compressed completely
- Cardiac biomarkers-high troponin, BNP
- V/Q scan-shows areas not perfused properly-
Management haemodynamically unstable?
- Resp support-
- targeting an initial oxygen saturation of 94% to 98% (this may need to be adjusted to 88% to 92% in patients at risk of hypercapnic respiratory failure)
- Fluid resuscitation-
- Give intravenous fluids if SBP is <90 mmHg and the JVP is not elevated
- Normal saline or Hartmann’s
Confirmed PE-haemodynamically unstable?
- Heparin-stop after 24 hrs
- Thrombolysis-alteplase/streptokinase over 2 hrs
- LMWH or DOACs-titrate off after heparin-note for cancer/preg
- Vasoactive drug-if low BP
- Surgical embolectomy or catheter directed treatment-
- Patients who are unable to receive thrombolytic therapy because of bleeding risk
- Insufficient time for effective systemic thrombolysis
- Failed thrombolysis.
M-If CI to thrombolysis?
- Unfractionated heparin
- Alternative anticoagulant
- Vasoactive drug
- Surgical embolectomy or catheter directed treatment
M-If CI to anticoagulation?
- Vasoactive drug
* Surgical embolectomy or catheter directed therapy
M-Haemodynamically unstable?
- Anticoagulation-
- apixaban or rivaroxaban; low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) is an alternative if these are unsuitable
- Risk assessment-
- Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index (PESI)
- Patients with hypotension or shock. All such patients are high-risk and must be managed accordingly with urgent primary reperfusion and anticoagulation
- Pregnant women
- Patients with active cancer; use the HESTIA score instead.
- Outpatient management/risk review