What echocardiographic findings differentiate acute pulmonary embolism and chronic pulmonary hypertension?

被引:7
|
作者
Alerhand, Stephen [1 ]
Adrian, Robert James [2 ]
机构
[1] Rutgers New Jersey Med Sch, Dept Emergency Med, 150 Bergen St, Newark, NJ 07103 USA
[2] Harvard Med Sch, Dept Emergency Med, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114 USA
来源
关键词
Right ventricular dysfunction; right ventricular strain; right ventricle; echocardiography; point-of-care ultrasound; POCUS; cardiac POCUS; ultrasound; pulmonary embolism; pulmonary hypertension; cor pulmonale; right heart thrombus; clot in transit; right ventricular free wall thickness; tricuspid regurgitation; tricuspid regurgitation pressure gradient; pulmonary artery systolic pressure; pulmonary artery acceleration time; 60; sign; pulmonary artery early-systolic notching; pulmonary artery mid-systolic notching; INFERIOR VENA-CAVA; RIGHT-VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY; PLANE SYSTOLIC EXCURSION; RIGHT ATRIAL FUNCTION; RIGHT HEART FUNCTION; DOPPLER-ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY; TRICUSPID REGURGITATION; ARTERIAL-PRESSURE; EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN SOCIETY;
D O I
10.1016/j.ajem.2023.07.011
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background: Pulmonary embolism (PE) and pulmonary hypertension (PH) are potentially fatal disease states. Early diagnosis and goal-directed management improve outcomes and survival. Both conditions share several echocardiographic findings of right ventricular dysfunction. This can inadvertently lead to incorrect diagnosis, inappropriate and potentially harmful management, and delay in time-sensitive therapies. Fortunately, bedside echocardiography imparts a few critical distinctions.Objective: This narrative review describes eight physiologically interdependent echocardiographic parameters that help distinguish acute PE and chronic PH. The manuscript details each finding along with associated pathophysiology and summarization of the literature evaluating diagnostic utility. This guide then provides pearls and pitfalls with high-quality media for the bedside evaluation.Discussion: The echocardiographic parameters suggesting acute or chronic right ventricular dysfunction (best used in combination) are: 1. Right heart thrombus (acute PE) 2. Right ventricular free wall thickness (acute << 5 mm, chronic > 5 mm) 3. Tricuspid regurgitation pressure gradient (acute << 46 mmHg, chronic > 46 mmHg, corresponding to tricuspid regurgitation maximal velocity << 3.4 m/sec and > 3.4 m/sec, respectively) 4. Pulmonary artery acceleration time (acute << 60-80 msec, chronic < 105 msec) 5.60/60 sign (acute) 6. Pulmonary artery early-systolic notching (proximally-located, higher-risk PE) 7. McConnell's sign (acute) 8. Right atrial enlargement (equal to left atrial size suggests acute, greater than left atrial size suggests chronic).Conclusions: Emergency physicians must appreciate the echocardiographic findings and associated pathophysiology that help distinguish acute and chronic right ventricular dysfunction. In the proper clinical context, these findings can point towards PE or PH, thereby leading to earlier goal-directed management. & COPY; 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:72 / 84
页数:13
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