Hussien Hishmat: There Is More to Pulmonary Embolism than Just Anticoagulation
Hussien Hishmat, Professor ot Cardiology and Interventional Cardiologist at Tadawi Healthcare, shared on LinkedIn:
”There is more to Pulmonary embolism than just anticoagulation!
- How to manage RV failure?
- When to deploy ECMO?
- How can thrombectomy help?
- Who should get an IVC filter?
- Is screening for cancer useful?
Today, we reach the advanced stage of our Pulmonary Embolism (PE) series, aligning with the latest ACC/AHA guidelines.
Let’s jump into advanced, high-stakes ICU and difficult clinical decisions.
1. Hemodynamic Management of Acute RV Failure
An acute PE spikes Pulmonary Vascular Resistance (PVR), dilating the thin-walled right ventricle (RV) and causing ischemia.
When RV diastolic pressure matches systemic pressure, RV coronary perfusion stops, triggering sudden collapse.
- Cautious Fluids: If the patient isn’t volume-depleted, give a limited 200–500 mL challenge. Excessive fluids over-distend the RV, worsen tricuspid regurgitation, and cause a leftward septal shift that drops systemic perfusion.
- Norepinephrine: First-line vasopressor that raises SVR and restores RV coronary perfusion. Keep the dose <15 mcg/min to prevent PVR elevation.
- Dobutamine: Add if extra support is needed. Its beta-1 inotropic effect pairs perfectly with background norepinephrine. Avoid Milrinone due to its long half-life and hypotensive risks.
- Inhaled Nitric Oxide (iNO): Selectively lowers PVR without systemic vasodilation. Use for Stages C2 to E2.
2. Mechanical Solutions: ECMO and Thrombectomy
- VA-ECMO: A vital rescue bridge for Stages E1 and E2. It unloads the RV, restores coronary perfusion, and bypasses hypoxic lungs. Note: Hemorrhage is more common than circuit thrombosis due to large lines and heparinization.
- Percutaneous Mechanical Thrombectomy: Class IIa recommendation for refractory shock. Large-bore aspiration decompresses the RV safely but carries access-site bleeding risks. Avoid in stable patients.
- Surgical Embolectomy: Reserved for Stage E1 shock. Provides instant RV decompression with a near-zero risk of intracranial hemorrhage.
3. The Realities of IVC Filters
Filters cut short-term recurrent PE by 50% but offer zero all-cause mortality benefit. Long-term placement carries a 70% late DVT risk plus perforation hazards.
- Absolute Indications: Absolute contraindication to anticoagulation or objective treatment failure.
- Retrieval Window: Filters must be pulled between Day 29 and Day 54 before embedding into the IVC wall.
4. PERT and Targeted Screenings
- PERT Teams: Class I recommendation for Stages C, D, and E to coordinate multidisciplinary care and shorten time to therapeutic anticoagulation.
- Thrombophilia: Only screen unprovoked PE patients under age 55 or with a strong family history. Draw functional assays only after the acute phase resolves.
- Cancer: 4%–10% of unprovoked PEs are diagnosed with cancer within a year. Avoid routine pan-CT/PET screening (high false positives, no survival benefit). Rely on history, physicals, and standard age-guided screenings.
5. Chronic Sequelae: CTEPD and CTEPH
Evaluate patients with persistent dyspnea beyond 3 months of anticoagulation for Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Disease (CTEPD) or Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH).
- 4-Test Panel: Get an Echo (screening), a V/Q scan (gold standard screen), a CTPA (anatomy), and a CPET (functional assessment).
- Treatment: Refer to a high-volume center for lifelong anticoagulation, Riociguat, or definitive procedures: Surgical Pulmonary Endarterectomy (PEA) for proximal clots, or Percutaneous Balloon Pulmonary Angioplasty (BPA) for distal disease.
How have these updated guidelines shifted your practice?
Let’s discuss in the comments below!”

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