PE RISK STRATIFICATION
We use 3 things:
-
Hemodynamics (blood pressure)
-
RV dysfunction (echo or CT)
-
Cardiac biomarkers (troponin, BNP)
1. HIGH-RISK (MASSIVE PE) — Needs thrombolysis
Criteria:
-
Hypotension (SBP < 90 for >15 min)
OR -
Shock (lactate elevated, altered MS, cold extremities)
Imaging/Biomarkers:
-
RV dilation (RV:LV > 1)
-
Troponin ↑, BNP ↑
ICU Management:
-
Heparin → Systemic thrombolysis (tPA)
-
Consider ECMO or catheter thrombectomy
Mortality: 15–30%
2. INTERMEDIATE-HIGH RISK PE
(Normotensive but BOTH RV dysfunction + positive biomarkers)
Criteria:
-
Normal BP
BUT -
RV dysfunction
-
Echo: RV dilation (RV/LV > 1), McConnell sign
-
CT: RV enlargement
-
-
AND elevated biomarkers:
-
Troponin
-
BNP
-
This is the “worrisome” PE—watch closely.
ICU Management:
-
Start anticoagulation
-
Monitor closely in ICU (risk of collapse)
-
Consider thrombolysis if:
-
Clinical deterioration
-
Rising cardiac enzymes
-
Worsening RV
-
Mortality: 5–10%
3. INTERMEDIATE-LOW RISK PE
(Normotensive + either RV dysfunction OR biomarker elevation, but NOT both)
Either:
-
RV dysfunction only
OR -
Elevated troponin/BNP only
But not both.
Management:
-
Anticoagulation
-
Floor or step-down (may need telemetry)
-
Monitor carefully but not usually ICU
Mortality: ~3–5%
4. LOW-RISK PE
Criteria:
-
Normal BP
-
NO RV dysfunction
-
NO elevated biomarkers
Often small peripheral PE.
Management:
-
Outpatient therapy possible (depending on situation)
-
DOAC preferred if stable
-
No ICU needed
Mortality: <1%
QUICK VISUAL TABLE (SUPER HIGH-YIELD)
| Risk Group | BP | RV dysfunction | Troponin/BNP | Mortality | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High (Massive) | Low BP/Shock | Yes/No | Yes/No | 15–30% | Thrombolysis, ICU, ECMO |
| Intermediate-High | Normal | Yes | Yes | 5–10% | ICU, consider lytics if worsening |
| Intermediate-Low | Normal | ± (One positive) | ± (One positive) | 3–5% | Anticoagulation, telemetry |
| Low-Risk | Normal | No | No | <1% | Outpatient possible |
ICU PEARLS
-
BP is the most important factor for “massive” PE.
-
Intermediate-High is the group that may suddenly decompensate → monitor in ICU.
-
Echo is critical — quickest way to identify RV dysfunction.
-
Troponin elevations correlate with RV strain and worse prognosis.
-
Thrombolysis is NOT routine in Intermediate-High unless patient deteriorates.
-
LACTATE elevation is a bad prognostic sign regardless of category.
-
a massive PE, don’t wait for CT if unstable — bedside echo + treat
-
Heparin is preferred because easy to turn off if thrombolysis needed
-
RV failure is the cause of death → treat RV, not just PE
-
Use low tidal volumes + avoid high PEEP (high PEEP worsens RV failure)
-
Watch for PFO (right-to-left shunt) in severe cases
-
Lactate correlates with severity
-
PE can cause obstructive shock → resembles tamponade physiology
Thrombolysis (Lytics)
Indication: MASSIVE PE
-
Hypotension or shock
-
Cardiac arrest from PE
Medication:
Alteplase (tPA)
-
100 mg IV over 2 hours
During arrest:
-
50 mg IV bolus, repeat once
Submassive PE
-
Consider thrombolysis if worsening RV failure, rising troponin, or decompensation
Mechanical Thrombectomy / Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis
Use if:
-
Absolute contraindication to systemic thrombolysis
-
High bleeding risk
-
Severe RV failure
-
Persistent shock despite heparin
Examples:
-
EKOS catheter
-
Suction thrombectomy
ECMO (VA-ECMO)
Used for:
-
Cardiac arrest from PE
-
Severe obstructive shock
-
Bridge to thrombectomy or recovery
Managing RV Failure in PE (CRITICAL FOR ICU)
Optimize preload
-
Avoid excessive fluids
-
Small bolus (250–500 mL) only if hypovolemic
-
Overload worsens RV dilation and septal shift
Support contractility
-
Dobutamine or Milrinone (but may drop BP)
-
In severe shock → combine with norepinephrine
Reduce RV afterload
-
Oxygen
-
Correct acidosis
-
Avoid hypoxia/hypercapnia
-
Consider inhaled vasodilators:
-
Inhaled nitric oxide
-
Inhaled epoprostenol
-
When Not to Thrombolyse
Absolute contraindications:
-
Active bleeding
-
Recent brain or spinal surgery (3 months)
-
Prior intracranial hemorrhage
-
Ischemic stroke < 3 months
-
Severe head trauma
Relative contraindications:
-
Anticoagulated patients
-
Recent surgery
-
Severe uncontrolled hypertension (>180/110)
Comment 0
| No. | Subject | Author | Date | Views |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | Cardiogenic shock in ICU | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 17 |
| » | PE in ICU | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 15 |
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| 22 | IVC | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 15 |
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| 20 | ICU steroid use | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 13 |
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| 13 | ABG example | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 13 |
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| 11 | Thoracentesis | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 14 |
| 10 | Intubation | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 11 |
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| 8 | ICU Sedation Guide | Drhyo | 2025.11.16 | 17 |
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