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Pulmonary Embolism

Pulmonary Embolism. Presenter: Dr.Omar Alsherif Moderator: Dr.Hussain Safar. Epidemiology. The related deaths in the United States from venous thromboembolism (VTE) are estimated at 300’000 annually. While in Europe VTE related deaths is estimated at 370’000 per year

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Pulmonary Embolism

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  1. Pulmonary Embolism • Presenter: Dr.Omar Alsherif • Moderator: Dr.Hussain Safar

  2. Epidemiology • The related deaths in the United States from venous thromboembolism (VTE) are estimated at 300’000 annually. While in Europe VTE related deaths is estimated at 370’000 per year • Autopsy studies have shown that approximately 60% of patients who have pulmonary embolism died in the hospital, with the diagnosis having been missed in up to 70% of the cases • DVT occur in 10-13% of patients placed on bed rest for 1 week, 29-33% of all patients in ICU, 20-26% of patients with pulmonary diseases who are given bed rest for > 2 days, 27-33% of patients admitted to CCU after MI, and 48% of patients who under went coronary bypass

  3. Epidemiology • The risk of PE is 20-30% higher in males than in females • Elderly people have higher risks of developing PE than young adults and PE is rare in pediatrics • Pregnant ladies have higher risks of developing PE. The annual incidence is 95.8 per 100’000 women for pregnant ladies and 511.2 per 100’000 women for postpartum ladies. The absolute risk was 199.7 incident per 100’000 women for both • PE accounts for 15% of all postoperative deaths. Lower limb amputations and hip, pelvic, and spinal surgeries are associated with higher risk

  4. Anatomy • Airway • Vascular bed

  5. Anatomy • Airways • Conducting zone, which includes the nose, mouth, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, and terminal bronchioles. Their function is bring air into and out of the respiratory zone and to warm, humidify, and filter the air • Respiratory zone, which includes the respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, and alveolar sac. Gas exchange occur at that site

  6. Anatomy • Vascular • Pulmonary arteries which is branches into smaller arteries. The smallest arteries divide into arterioles then into capillaries at the respiratory zone

  7. Physiology • Mechanism of inspiration • Inspiration: when the diaphragm and the intercostal muscles contract, the abdominal contents are pushed down and the ribs are lifted upward and outward, increasing the thoracic cavity size and creating -ve pressure. Air will be driven into the lungs • Expiration: it is normally a passive process as air is driven out of the lungs by the reverse pressure gradient between the lungs and atmosphere

  8. Physiology • Gas exchange • According to Fick’s law gas exchange occur due to simple diffusion • In order to maintain the process good capillary perfusion is required

  9. Definition • It is an obstruction of the pulmonary artery usually by blood clot • It is a complication of another disease

  10. Etiology Virchow’s Triad Stasis Thrombosis Hypercoag -ulability Endothelial Injury

  11. Etiology • Venous stasis • Immobilization • Surgery • Obesity • Endothelial injury • Trauma • IV drug abuse • Hypercoagulable states • Pregnancy • Oral contraceptive pills & estrogen replacement therapy • Malignancy • Hereditary

  12. Pathophysiology • There are both respiratory and hemodynamic consequences associated with PE • Respiratory • Increase alveolar dead space ➔ Ventilation-perfusion mismatch ➔ Hypoxemia ➔ Hyperventilation • Hemodynamic • Reduces the cross section of pulmonary vascular bed ➔ Increase pulmonary vascular resistance ➔ Increase Rt ventricle after load ➔ Rt ventricular failure • If left untreated will result in chronic pulmonary hypertension

  13. Clinical Presentation • History • Sudden onset of chest pain • Shortness of breath • Cough, hemoptysis • Palpitations • Cyanosis • Collapse • Sudden death

  14. Clinical Presentation • Examination • Tachypnea • Tachycardia • Fever • Cyanosis • Accentuated second heart sound • S₃ or S₄ gallop • Lower extremity edema • Raised JVP • Tender calf muscle on dorsiflexion of the foot (Homans sign) • Shock

  15. Clinical Scoring Revised Geneva Scoring System

  16. Clinical Scoring • Clinical probability • Score < 4, low risk patient • Score 4-10, intermediate risk patient • Score > 10, high risk patient

  17. Differential Diagnosis • Cardiac • Acute coronary syndrome • Aortic stenosis • Mitral stenosis • CHF • Pulmonary • ARDS • Pneumothorax • Pulmonary edema • COPD & emphysema • Other • Anxiety • Fat embolism

  18. Investigations • Rule In/Out PE • Determine the risk stratification and the management • Clinical evaluation • Cardiac biomarkers • ECG • Echocardiography • CT-Chest

  19. Investigations • Blood tests • CBC • WBC • D-dimer • ABG • S.Troponin I & T • Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) & NT-pro brain natriuretic peptide (NT-pro BNP) • ECG • Sinus tachycardia • Pulmonary embolism pattern (SI QIII TIII) • prominent S wave in lead I • A Q wave & inverted T wave in lead III • Signs of right ventricular failure • T wave inversion in V₁-V₃ & Qr in V₁ • Peaked P wave in lead II • Right axis deviation • RBBB

  20. Investigations • Radiology • CXR • Atelectasis • Pleural effusion • Prominent central pulmonary artery (knuckle sign) • Cardiomegaly • Pulmonary edema • Wedge shaped triangular opacity (Hampton hump)

  21. Radiology • Echocardiogram • Useful tool for assessing the Rt ventricle function • Assessing the risk stratification • Duplex ultrasound • Helps in demonstrating DVT • -ve scan does not rule out PE as many DVT occur in inaccessible are to U/S • 2/3 of patients with PE caused by DVT has -ve duplex US • Pulmonary angiography • 100% sensitive • 90% specific • Invasive • High dose of radiation • Renal toxicity • High cost • Not always available

  22. Radiology • CT-angiography • The initial imaging modality of choice • Can provide additional information related to alternate diagnosis • Ventilation perfusion scanning • Should only be used when there is contraindication to CT scanning or if CT is not available

  23. Treatment • Primary prevention • Thrombolytic therapy • Surgery • Secondary prevention • Anticoagulant • IVC filter (Greenfield filter)

  24. Treatment

  25. Treatment • Immediate anticoagulation is mandatory for all patients suspected of having DVT or PE whom hemodynamically stable • Diagnostic investigations should not delay empirical anticoagulant therapy • Anticoagulant must be started with heparin, LMWH, or fondaparinux with warfarin since warfarin requires 5-7 days to achieve therapeutic level

  26. Treatment • Anticoagulant • Heparin; started with IV bolus 5000-10’000 units followed by 1000-1500 units/hour to achieve a target activated partial thromboplastin time APTT 2-3 times the upper limit for the patient • LMWH; enoxaparin (clexane) 1mg/kg SC twice daily • Fondaparinux; 5 mg/day SC for patients < 50 kg, 7.5 mg/day SC for patients 50-100 kg, 10 mg/day SC for patients > 100 kg • Warfarin; starting does 5 mg/day then the dose must be adjusted to achieve INR 2.0-3.0

  27. Treatment • Duration of therapy as recommended by the American College of Chest Physicians • First event of VTE with reversible or time risk factors (trauma, surgery) ⟹ at least three months • First episode of idiopathic VTE ⟹ at least six months • Recurrent idiopathic VTE or continuing risk factor (thrombophilia, spinal cord injury) ⟹ at least one year • Symptomatic isolated calf vein thrombosis ⟹ 6-12 weeks

  28. Treatment • IVC filter implantation indications • Active bleeding • Recurrent venous thrombosis despite intensive anticoagulation

  29. Treatment • Fibrinolysis • The initial management for patients with PE and shock is RESUSCITATION • Successful fibrinolytic therapy is achieved by using 100 mg tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) administered as continuos infusion over two hours • It is contraindicated in intracranial disease, recent surgery or trauma

  30. Treatment • Embolectomy • The American HeartAssociation (AHA) advise that either catheter embolectomy and fragmentation or surgical embolectomy surgical embolectomy is indicated if • Patient has massive PE and contraindication to use thrombolysis • Patient remains unstable after receiving thrombolytic therapy

  31. Prevention • DVT risk stratification level is a method of collecting information from the patient to assess the patient risk of developing DVT

  32. Prevention

  33. Prevention

  34. Prevention

  35. Prevention

  36. Prevention • The American College of Chest Physicians recommendations • Low risk patient early ambulation • Moderate risk patients • Heparin 5’000 units SC bid or enoxaparin < 40 mg/day, or mechanical prophylaxis • High risk patients • Heparin 5’000 units SC tid or enoxaparin 40 mg/day • Mechanical prophylaxis • Very high risk patients • Adjusted dose heparin, enoxaparin 40 mg bid, or adjusted dose warfarin • Mechanical prophylaxis

  37. Prevention • Mechanical prophylaxis • Thigh high graduated compression stockings • Sequential compression devices • External pneumatic compress • Intermittent pneumatic compression • Venous foot pumps

  38. Thank You

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