PE, DVT, Pneumothorax Flashcards
Fat embolus
Long bone fx
Liposuction
Amniotic fluid embolus
DIC postpartum
Air embolus
Caisson dz – “the bends”
IV
Trauma – too much pressure from ventilator
Bacterial embolus
Bacterial endocarditis
Pneumothorax
Abnormal collection of air in pleural space separates lung from chest wall
Primary spontaneous: randomly occurs
-tall, thin, young males
d/t rupture of apical blebs
secondary – existing lung pathology – more severe
Sx: SOB, CP
Dx: physical exam, CXR, CT scan
Tension pneumothorax
One way valve mechanism
Builds up pressure
Shift organs towards normal side – displacement of trachea
Leads to airway/vascular compromise
Tx: needle decompression
Virchow’s triad
Stasis: severely ill, paralyzed, long trips, cast
Hypercoagulability: sickle cell, polycythemia, estrogen excess, cancer, pregnancy, OCPs, smoking
Endothelial damage: vessel trauma, fracture, foreign body, bacterial infection
Deep venous thrombosis (DVT)
Sx: foot/ankle (u/l) edema +/- pain +/- Homan’s sign (pain w/ ankle dorsiflexion) +/- palpable cord
Dx: compression US – high probability
D-dimer then US – low probability (R/O test)
Prevention:
Heparin (sq), enoxaparin (LMW), compression stockings or sequential compression devices (SCDs)
Tx:
Initial first 10 days: LMW heparin, fondaparinux, unfractionated heparin
-Factor Xa inhibitors, direct thrombin inhibitors
Long term anticoagulation: warfarin (INR 2-3), LMW heparin, fondaparinux
Pulmonary embolism
Sx: pleuritic CP, SOB, cough, hemoptysis (rare), fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, altered mental status/confusion
R/o test: elevated D-dimer +/- DVT on lower extremity US, usually normal CXR
Large A-a gradient on arterial blood gas
+/- ECG changes (S1Q3T3 – deep S in I, large Q and inverted T in 3)
CT scan with contrast most often used
V/Q scan
Pulmonary angiogram
“saddle embolus” = death
Tx:
Massive PE: thrombolysis immediately – usually just heparin/warfarin
First 10 days: LMW heparin, fondaparinux, unfractionated heparin
Long term anticoagulation: Warfarin (INR 2-3)
Factor Xa inhibitors: rivoroxaban, apixaban, endoxaban
Direct thrombin inhibitor – dabigatran