Treatment of Intermediate-Risk Pulmonary Embolism

פוסט זה זמין גם ב: עברית

Robert Smyth, M.D.,  Christopher  Kabrhel,  .D., M.P.H.,  and Timothy Morris, M.D.

Case Vignette

A Woman with a Pulmonary Embolism

Robert Smyth, M.D.

A 33-year-old woman presents to her local rural health center with acute-onset dyspnea and chest pain. She has no relevant medical history and takes a combined oral contraceptive for birth control. On examination, she has no fever, and her respiratory rate is 26 breaths per minute, heart rate 122 beats per minute, blood pressure 116/80 mm Hg, and oxygen saturation 92% while she is breathing ambient air. Her right leg is swollen from the upper thigh to below the knee. An electrocardiogram shows sinus tachycardia with an incomplete right bundle-branch block. Laboratory tests show a high-sensitivity troponin I level of 92 ng per liter (reference value, <35) and an N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) level of 2150 pg per milliliter (reference range, 0 to 130). A computed tomographic pulmonary angiogram shows a saddle pulmonary embolism with a clot in the proximal right and left main pulmonary arteries, patchy parenchymal infiltrates, and flattening of the cardiac interventricular septum, with a ratio of right ventricular diameter to left ventricular diameter of 1.0. An echocardiogram shows moderate right ventricular dilatation with a reduced ejection fraction. The patient’s vital signs remain unchanged over the course of 30 minutes. You have heard that catheter-directed therapy is being studied in some patients with pulmonary embolism at the nearest referral center, but transferring your patient would involve a 5-hour ground transport.

You must decide whether this 33-year-old woman with an acute pulmonary embolism should be treated with standard parenteral heparin alone or whether heparin should be administered in conjunction with a reduced-dose thrombolytic agent.

Treatment Options

Which one of the following approaches would you take for this patient? Base your choice on the literature, your own experience, published guidelines, and other information.

  1. Recommend thrombolysis in addition to heparin therapy.

  2. Recommend parenteral heparin therapy only.

To aid in your decision making, we asked two experts in the field to summarize the evidence in favor of approaches assigned by the editors. Given your knowledge of the issue and the points made by the experts, which approach would you choose?

  1. Option 1: Recommend Thrombolysis in Addition to Heparin Therapy
  2. Option 2: Recommend Parenteral Heparin Therapy Only

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