Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClementine Warren Modified over 9 years ago
1
Diagnosis and management of pulmonary thromboembolism DR.VIVEKANANTHAN D.A.,FRCA.,EDIC.,FFICM.,
2
OVERVIEW Diagnosis – tests available and diagnostic strategies used Prognostic assessment Management- therapeutic strategies and methods available Special circumstances
3
Pulmonary thromboembolism Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) spectrum- DVT & PE Major morbidity and mortality Not uncommon Diagnosis could be Elusive
4
Risk factors
5
pathophysiology
6
Diagnosis- Symptoms galore! Pollack et.al 2011
7
pitfall amongst symptoms and signs 30% patients with Confirmed PE do not have predisposing factors 40% patients with confirmed PE do not have hypoxaemia 20% patients with confirmed PE have normal alveolar arterial oxygen gradient 40% patients with confirmed PE have sinus tachycardia on ECG rather than classical ECG changes 59% of fatal PE were undiagnosed during life time
8
Acute PE- Initial diagnostic strategy With shock and without shock- High risk PE Moderate and low risk PE
9
Diagnosis -Assessing clinical probability Wells rule Geneva rule Three group category -Low, intermediate, high risk grouping Two group category- PE likely, PE unlikely grouping
10
WELLS RULE
11
GENEVA RULE
12
Diagnosis- D-dimer Positive predictive value is low Negative predictive value is high ELISA derived assay Vs latex derived assay reliability Usefulness- can exclude PE in up to 30% of patients suspected with low or intermediate risk PE- (class I recommendation) Age adjusted D-dimer cut off value improved specificity by 10%, if not specificity decreases with age
13
Diagnosis- CT pulmonary angiogram 83% sensitivity and 96% specificity –PIOPED II trial Negative predictive value for CTPA is >89-96% in intermediate and low risk group Segmental clot presence confirms PE -(class I recommendation) CT venography combined with CTPA increases sensitivity from 83 to 90%, however specificity remains the same Incidental CT diagnosis of PE is 1% Sub segmental PE incidence is 4.5% with lower clinical significance
14
Diagnosis- ventilation perfusion scintigraphy V/Q scan- technicium99 Well validated test Safe, less allergic, <50% radiation exposure Special groups of patients will benefit from it Results are grouped into three- normal, high probability and non diagnostic scan
15
Diagnosis- other imaging techniques SPECT imaging- Pulmonary angiogram- DSA- MRI-
16
Diagnosis- Echocardiography RV free wall contractility depressed as against the apex- “Mc Connell sign” Disturbed RV ejection fraction- “60-60 sign” RV dilatation – found in 25% of all cases of PE Negative predictive value is only 40-50% due to other confounders Not an investigation for low risk, non shocked patients
17
Diagnosis- compression venous ultrasonography 90% sensitivity and 95% specificity for symptomatic DVT >70 % of PE patients have DVT Proximal DVT in PE suspected patients is good enough to start anticoagulation- (class I recommendation) Incomplete compressibility is a validated criterion for DVT diagnosis Flow measurements are unreliable
18
Diagnostic strategy Patients suspected to have PE, presenting With shock Without shock
19
Suspected PE with shock
20
Suspected PE without shock
21
PE exclusion -validated parameters
22
Treatment of PE- Overview Haemodynamic, ventilatory support Anti coagulation Thrombolysis Surgical embolectomy, percutaneous techniques, use of IVC filter
23
Treatment- resuscitation and supportive care RV failure- main cause for mortality adrenaline helps in RV failure Modest fluid challenge helps improve cardiac index- caution needed Effects of PEEP during ventilation needs careful titration Levosimendan and nitric oxide might be useful
24
Treatment- anticoagulation To prevent early death and recurrent VTE Initial parenteral anticoagulation for 7-10 days necessary- heparin, LMWH, fondaparinux vit.K antagonist after the initial phase for up to 3 months duration is essential Duration of anticoagulation- unprovoked PE ( 3 months) unprovoked relapse of PE ( indefinite)- (class I recommendation) Newer anticoagulants can be started earlier- rivaroxaban, apixaban
25
Treatment- choice of anticoagulant UFH- shorter duration of action, suitable for pt. with renal impairment, obesity, APPT monitoring needed LMWH- twice daily or single dose administration, caution with renal impairment, HIT possibility, anti Xa level monitoring possible Fondaparinux- once daily s/c inj., results comparable to that of UFH, no reported HIT like effects, accumulates in renal failure
26
Treatment- oral anticoagulants Warfarin –Vit K Antagonist(VKA) started as soon as possible, INR target of 2.0-3.0 is aimed Pharmacogenetics' guided therapy is not found to be superior Newer oral anticoagulants (NOAC)- dabigatran, rivaroxaban., NOAC- not inferior to UFH/ VKA regimen, possibly the bleeding risk is lesser – (class I recommendations for rivaroxaban apixaban and edoxaban)
27
Treatment- thrombolytic therapy Restores pulmonary perfusion earlier than anticoagulation therapy Two hours’ accelerated therapy preferred over 12-24 hour prolonged infusion therapy >90% patients have clinical recovery within 36 hours of therapy, greatest benefit seen if therapy initiated within 48 hours of onset of symptoms Normotensive patients with raised biochemical parameters and echocardiographic features of RV dysfunction, if thrombolysed, 7 day mortality and further complications were prevented (PEITHO trial) Major bleeding risk- intra cranial and non intracranial bleeds- 2%
28
Treatment- surgical embolectomy Surgical technique used since 1924 Indicated for failed thrombolytic therapy or where it is contraindicated amongst intermediate or high risk patients
29
Treatment- percutaneous catheter directed treatment Thrombus fragmentation, rotational thrombectomy, suction thrombectomy, rheolytic thrombectomy techniques are available Systemic Thrombolysis contraindicated patients are suitable for these techniques RCT: Catheter directed clot thrombolysis technique has been found superior in reversing RV function within 48 hours as compared to systemic thrombolysis WITHOUT bleeding complications in intermediate risk group of patients
30
Treatment – IVC filter Infra renal placement is usually done IVC filters should be considered in patients with acute PE with absolute contraindications to anticoagulation. ( class II a recommendation) IVC filters should be considered in case of recurrence of PE, despite therapeutic levels of anticoagulation. ( class II a recommendation) Routine use of IVC filters in patients with PE is not recommended ( class I recommendation)
31
Special circumstances- pregnancy D-Dimer is useful to avoid unnecessary irradiation Venous compression ultrasonography is considered to avoid irradiation risk Perfusion scintigraphy may be considered to rule out suspected PE when the chest x ray is normal CT angiography considered only when chest x ray is abnormal LMWH adjusted to weight is treatment of choice in pts without shock
32
Special circumstances- cancer and PE Incidental PE on cancer screening is treated along the same guidelines for non cancer patients suspected to have PE Negative D-dimer has similar negative diagnostic value LMWH adjusted to body weight is used for 3-6 months Extended anticoagulation with LMWH is considered until cancer is cured- (class II a recommendation)
33
Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension Incidence of 1.5 % in patients diagnosed with earlier PE Diagnostic criteria: findings after 3 months of effective anticoagulation: 1. mean pulmonary arterial pressure ≥25 mm Hg, with pulmonary arterial wedge pressure≤15 mm Hg 2. at least one (segmental) perfusion defect detected by perfusion lung scan or pulmonary artery obstruction seen by MDCT angiography or conventional pulmonary cine angiography V/Q scan is investigation of choice Pulmonary endarterectomy offered if operable, if not extended anticoagulation advised - (Class I recommendation)
34
Prognosis in PE Simplified predicted severity in PE (sPSE score)- validated clinical score Age >80, Cancer Chronic cardiac, pulmonary disease Heart rate >110, blood pressure <100, saturation <90% 0 points =1% mortality, >1 point= 10% risk of 30 day mortality- used for low and intermediate severity- ( class II a recommendation) Patients to be assessed for presence of shock- carries higher mortality – (class I recommendation) Lab tests and biomarkers- BNP, Pro BNP, troponin T, I ( class II a)
35
acknowledgment http://www.escardio.org/guidelinessurveys/esc- guidelines/about/Pages/rules-writing.aspx http://www.escardio.org/guidelinessurveys/esc- guidelines/about/Pages/rules-writing.aspx European society of cardiology guideline 2014 European heart Journal August 2014
36
Summary- Diagnosis and treatment of PE Strong clinical suspicion is necessary to investigate and use the diagnostic strategies Judicious use of investigations will avoid unnecessary burden in patient care delivery Choice of therapy is vital in dictating better patient outcome
37
Thank you
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.