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==Background==
==Background==
===Clinical Spectrum of [[Venous Thromboembolism]]===
{{Venous thromboembolism types}}
===Types===
{{PE types}}


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==

Revisión del 04:09 7 nov 2014

Background

Clinical Spectrum of Venous Thromboembolism

Clinical Spectrum of Venous thromboembolism (VTE)

Only 40% of ambulatory ED patients with PE have concomitant DVT[1][2]

Types

Clinical Features

Symptoms

Signs

  • Tachycardia (HR>100), Tachypnea (RR>20), Hypoxemia (SpO2<95%) are seen ~50% of the time
  • Hypotension (SBP<90) only seen 10% of the time, but largest predictor of mortality
  • Unilateral calf tenderness or edema, suggestive of a DVT
  • Other signs may include accentuated pulmonic component of second heart sound, JVD, or decreased breath sounds

Differential Diagnosis

Chest pain

Critical

For a more thorough differential, please see Chest pain

Workup

If clinical features suggestive of PE and lower extremity swelling then
  1. Bilateral LE Ultrasound
  1. if Positive-->treat empirically for PE
  2. if Negative-->CTA


CT (with shield) vs. V/Q is roughly equilivalent radiation exposure

American Thoracic Society In Pregnancy[3]

  • D-dimer is not recommended for excluding PE (weak recommendation, very-low-quality evidence).
  • If signs and symptoms of deep venous thrombosis (DVT), first perform bilateral venous compression ultrasound (CUS) of lower extremities, followed by anticoagulation treatment if positive and by further testing if negative (weak recommendation, very-low-quality evidence).
  • If no signs and symptoms of DVT, pulmonary vascular imaging should be used over bilateral lower extremity ultrasounds(weak recommendation, very-low-quality evidence).

D-Dimer

  • D-Dimer MAY BE used with following limits with very poor evidence[4][5]
    • 1st trimester: <750 ng/mL (+50% increase from normal lab threshold)
    • 2nd trimester: <1000 ng/mL (+100% from normal)
    • 3rd trimester: <1250 ng/mL (+150% from normal)

Management

Disposition

Admit

See Also

Sources

  1. Righini M, Le GG, Aujesky D, et al. Diagnosis of pulmonary embolism by multidetector CT alone or combined with venous ultrasonography of the leg: a randomised non-inferiority trial. Lancet. 2008; 371(9621):1343-1352.
  2. Daniel KR, Jackson RE, Kline JA. Utility of the lower extremity venous ultrasound in the diagnosis and exclusion of pulmonary embolism in outpatients. Ann Emerg Med. 2000; 35(6):547-554.
  3. Leung, A et al. An Official American Thoracic Society/Society of Thoracic Radiology Clinical Practice Guideline: Evaluation of Suspected Pulmonary Embolism PDF
  4. Kovac M. The use of D-dimer with new cutoff can be useful in diagnosis of venous thromboembolism in pregnancy. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2010 Jan;148(1):27-30
  5. http://blog.ercast.org/2013/04/pulmonary-embolism-in-pregnancy/