Pulmonary thromboembolism and infarct Flashcards

1
Q

What is the commonest cause of pulmonary embolism?

A

Venous thrombosis forms in the leg or pelvis (iliofemoral vein). Clots break off and pass through veins and right side of the heart before lodging into pulmonary circulation

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2
Q

Rare causes

A
RV thrombosis 
Septic emboli (right sided endocarditis) 
Fat 
Air 
Amniotic fluid
Neoplastic cells 
Parasites
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3
Q

Risk factors for PE?

A
Prolonged immobility 
Recent surgery 
Thrombophilia (e.g. antiphospholipid syndrome) 
Leg fracture 
Malignancy 
Pregnancy/ postpartum/ pill/ HRT
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4
Q

Size of embolus determines severity. What occurs in a massive embolus?

A

A massive embolism will fully occlude right ventricular outflow
Increase in pulmonary vascular resistance will cause right heart failure

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5
Q

What occurs in a small embolus?

A

Small embolus will impact in a terminal, peripheral pulmonary vessel – may be clinically silent unless it causes pulmonary infarction

Lung tissue is ventilated but not perfused – impaired gas exchange

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6
Q

What prevention is undertaken to prevent PE?

A

Give heparin to all immobile patients
Prescribe compression stockings
Early mobilisation
Stop hormone replacement therapy and the pill pre-op

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7
Q

How does heparin (and fondaparinux) act?

A

inhibit formation of factor 10a, so prothrombin is not converted to thrombin and subsequently fibrinogen is not converted to fibrin. Prevents thrombus formation

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8
Q

Clinical symptoms?

A

Pleuritic chest pain

Acute breathlessness

Dizziness and syncope

Haemoptysis

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9
Q

Clinical signs?

A
Pyrexia 
Cyanosis
Tachypnoea and tachycardia
Hypotension 
Raised JVP
Pleural rub 
Pleural effusion
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10
Q

Blood tests and results for PE?

A

FBC and U&E to determine baseline clotting

D dimer test- negative d dimer test will exclude PE (positive doesn’t confirm)

ABG may show low PaO2 and low PaCO2

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11
Q

What imaging tests are done for PE?

A

CXR- show oligaemia (low blood flow) of the effected segment: dilated pulmonary artery, linear collapse, small pleural effusion, wedge-shaped opacities

CT pulmonary angiography- will show clots down to 5th order pulmonary arteries

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12
Q

An ECG may reveal the cause of a pulmonary embolism? What may it show?

A

Normal OR:
Tachycardia
RBBB
Right ventricular strain (inverted T in V1 to V4)

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13
Q

What are causes of RBBB?

A

RB hypertrophy
Pulmonary embolism
Ischaemic heart disease

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14
Q

Treatment for PE?

A

Anti-coagulate with LMW heparin (faster acting)
Start warfarin
Stop heparin when INR > 2 and continue warfarin
Thrombolysis for massive PE

If thromboemboli continue to develop despite adequate anti-coagulation add a veno-caval filter.

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