Pulmonary Embolism Flashcards
1
Q
What is the cause of pulmonary embolism?
A
Virchows triad:
- stasis
- coagulation
- damaged epithelial lining
2
Q
Where do emboli typically come from?
A
They usually come from the pelvis or the abdomen and sometimes from DVT’s but rarely from the right heart itself
3
Q
What are some of the risk factors/predisposing factors leading to the development of DVT’S?
A
- Surgery/immobilisation
- pregnancy/hormonal pills
- congestive cardiac failure
- Pelvic/lower limb fractures
- inherited hypercoaguability-factor v leiden
6.
4
Q
What is the clinical picture of amassive pulmonary embolism?
A
- sudden collapse of the lung acute obstruction
- Shocked
- Pale
- Sweating
- tachypnea
- tachycardia
- Low BP
- Syncope, confusion, death
- right heart failure (JVP)
5
Q
What are the clinical features of moderate pulmonary embolism?
A
- mixture of massive and mild. Right heart failure
6
Q
What are the clinical features of mild pulmonary embolism?
A
- Pleuritic pain
- dyspnea
- cough
- haemoptysis
- pleural effusion
- friction rubs
7
Q
What is the differential of pulmonary embolism?
A
- cardiac: angina, myocardial infarction, pericarditis
- Respiratory: Pneumonia, asthma, penumothorax
- Other: costochrondritis, panic attack, rib fracture
8
Q
How do we diagnose pulmonary embolism?
A
- X-ray: mostly normal/ pleural effusion/wedge-shaped opacification/decreased blood flow in a distal zone, volume loss with raised hemidiaphragm