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Diagnosis and Management of Pulmonary Embolism (PE).

When deciding on references, consider whether the journal is high impact. References should also be within the last 5 years.

· References should be more related to practice guidelines and not clinical trials. We want to make sure that the presentation is clear on how to diagnose and treat PE related to current standards of practice. See below some links that may help.

· https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7284001/

· https://www.hematology.org/education/clinicians/guidelines-and-quality-care/clinical-practice-guidelines/venous-thromboembolism-guidelines/treatment

· https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK560551/

· https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMcp2116489

· Often times a hematologist will be consulted to see a patient with newly diagnosed DVT or PE. This would be a good source to reference from the American Society of Hematology.

· Add 2 slides to the outline:

· Comparison of prior standards for diagnosing and treating PEs. Remember our audience will be practitioners in practice with 20+ years and novice practitioners.

· Populations for Special Considerations for treating PEs

· What happens if a patient cannot be treated with Heparin, etc? The standard treatments.

· Are there special considerations for cancer patients, older adults, etc.

· Add treatment education for patients.

 

SOLUTION 

 


Presentation Title: Pulmonary Embolism – Evidence-Based Diagnosis and Management

Slide 1: Title Slide

  • Title: Pulmonary Embolism: Updated Clinical Practice Guidelines

  • Your name, credentials

  • Institution

  • Date


Slide 2: Objectives

  • Describe current guideline-based methods for diagnosing and managing PE.

  • Compare prior vs. current standards of care.

  • Identify treatment adaptations for special populations.

  • Provide practical education strategies for patient management.


Slide 3: Overview of Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

  • Definition: Blockage of pulmonary artery by thrombus

  • Pathophysiology: Often from deep vein thrombosis (DVT)

  • Clinical urgency due to high mortality without prompt treatment


Slide 4: Epidemiology and Risk Factors

  • ~1 per 1000 persons per year

  • Risk factors: Immobility, cancer, recent surgery, hormone therapy, obesity, history of DVT/PE


Slide 5: Clinical Presentation

  • Symptoms: Dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemoptysis, syncope

  • Signs: Tachycardia, hypoxia, leg swelling (if DVT), elevated JVP


Slide 6: Diagnostic Tools – Current Guidelines

  • Risk stratification: Wells Score, Geneva Score

  • D-dimer for low/moderate-risk patients

  • Gold standard: CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA)

  • V/Q scan for renal insufficiency or pregnancy

  • Bedside echocardiography for unstable patients

🔗 Source: Konstantinides et al., 2020; ASH Guidelines, 2020
🔗 NEJM Clinical Practice Article, 2022


Slide 7: Comparison to Prior Standards

  • Before: Universal imaging and anticoagulation without scoring

  • Now: Risk-based decision-making, PERC rule, outpatient eligibility

  • Emphasis on avoiding unnecessary anticoagulation or radiation exposure

🔗 Source: Piazza & Goldhaber, 2022 (NEJM)
🔗 NIH Book: PE Diagnostic Approach


Slide 8: Initial Management

  • Oxygen and hemodynamic support

  • Immediate anticoagulation (unless contraindicated)

  • Systemic thrombolysis only in massive PE

  • Catheter-directed thrombolysis in intermediate-high-risk patients


Slide 9: Anticoagulation Treatment

  • First-line: Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) – Apixaban, Rivaroxaban

  • Alternative: LMWH (Enoxaparin), IV Heparin (especially if unstable)

  • Warfarin + bridge therapy: Used selectively

🔗 ASH 2020 Treatment Guidelines


Slide 10: What If Heparin Cannot Be Used?

  • Contraindication (e.g., HIT): Use Fondaparinux or DOAC

  • IVC filter only if anticoagulation is absolutely contraindicated


Slide 11: Duration of Anticoagulation

  • Provoked PE: 3 months

  • Unprovoked: Consider extended therapy

  • Cancer-associated: Minimum 6 months; typically LMWH or DOAC


Slide 12: Populations Requiring Special Consideration

  • Cancer patients: Prefer LMWH; some DOACs now approved

  • Older adults: Higher bleeding risk; adjust for renal function

  • Pregnancy: LMWH; DOACs contraindicated

  • Obesity: Weight-adjusted LMWH or higher fixed-dose DOACs

🔗 ASH, 2020; NEJM 2022; NIH Bookshelf (NBK560551)


Slide 13: Monitoring and Follow-Up

  • Labs: CBC, renal/liver function, aPTT (if on heparin), INR (if on warfarin)

  • Imaging only if symptoms worsen

  • Monitor for signs of bleeding or recurrent VTE


Slide 14: Patient Education

  • Medication adherence: Risk of recurrence if stopped early

  • Bleeding precautions: Avoid NSAIDs, alcohol, contact sports

  • DVT prevention: Hydration, mobility

  • When to call provider: SOB, chest pain, leg swelling, hemoptysis


Slide 15: Summary

  • Risk stratification is essential for accurate diagnosis

  • DOACs are first-line for most patients

  • Special populations need individualized care

  • Patient education improves adherence and outcomes


Slide 16: References (APA 7th Edition)

  1. Konstantinides, S. V., et al. (2020). 2019 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism. European Heart Journal, 41(4), 543–603. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehz405

  2. American Society of Hematology. (2020). ASH Clinical Practice Guidelines on VTE. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMcp2116489

  3. NIH. (2020). Pulmonary Embolism. In StatPearls. Diagnosis and Management of Pulmonary Embolism (PE). appeared first on Skilled Papers.

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