Episode 214: Acute Pulmonary Embolism
We review the diagnosis, risk stratification, & management of acute pulmonary embolism in the ED.
Hosts:
Vivian Chiu, MD
Brian Gilberti, MD
https://media.blubrry.com/coreem/content.blubrry.com/coreem/Acute_Pulmonary_Embolism.mp3
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Tags: Pulmonary
Show Notes
Core Concepts and Initial Approach
Definition: Obstruction of pulmonary arteries, usually from a DVT in the proximal lower extremity veins (iliac/femoral), but may be tumor, air, or fat emboli.
Incidence & Mortality: 300,000–370,000 cases/year in the USA, with 60,000–100,000 deaths annually.
Mantra: “Don’t anchor on the obvious. Always risk stratify and resuscitate with precision.”
Risk Factors: Broad, including older age, inherited thrombophilias, malignancy, recent surgery/trauma, travel, smoking, hormonal use, and pregnancy.
Clinical Presentation and Risk Stratification
Presentation: Highly variable, showing up as anything from subtle shortness of breath to collapse.
Acute/Subacute: Dyspnea (most common), pleuritic chest pain, cough, hemoptysis, and syncope. Patients are likely tachycardic, tachypneic, hypoxemic on room air, and may have a low-grade fever.
Chronic: Can mimic acute symptoms or be totally asymptomatic.
Pulmonary Infarction Signs: Pleuritic pain, hemoptysis, and an effusion.
High-Risk Red Flags: Signs of hypotension (systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg for over 15 minutes),