ICU Management of Pulmonary Embolism


 1. INITIAL APPROACH (FIRST 5–10 MIN)

 A. Assess Severity (Use A–E or ESC risk)

  • Shock / SBP <90 HIGH RISK (Category E)
  • Stable risk stratify (A–C)

 B. Immediate Supportive Care

Oxygenation

  • Target SpO₂ > 92%
  • HFNC / NIV if needed
  • Intubation last resort (can worsen RV failure)

Hemodynamic Support

  • Fluids:
    • Small bolus (250–500 mL) ONLY if hypovolemic
    • Avoid overload (worsens RV dilation)
  • Vasopressors:
    • Norepinephrine = FIRST LINE
    • Add vasopressin if refractory
  • Inotropes (if RV failure):
    • Dobutamine (low CO states)

Ventilation Strategy (if intubated)

  • Low tidal volume
  • Avoid high PEEP ( venous return)
  • Avoid hypercapnia ( PVR)

 2. ANTICOAGULATION 

 Start immediately unless contraindicated

 Contraindications (Absolute)

  • Active bleeding
  • Recent major surgery (high-risk)

A. First-line Options

1. LMWH (Preferred in most stable patients)

  • Enoxaparin:1 mg/kg SC BD OR 1.5 mg/kg OD

2. Unfractionated Heparin (UFH)  Preferred in:

  • Shock / high-risk PE
  • Planned thrombolysis / procedures
  • Renal failure

Dose:

  • Bolus: 80 U/kg
  • Infusion: 18 U/kg/hr (aPTT target 1.5–2.5×)

3. DOACs (Stable patients)

  • Apixaban / Rivaroxaban
     No need for heparin bridging (for some regimens)

4. Fondaparinux

  • Alternative to LMWH

3. REPERFUSION THERAPY

 A. HIGH-RISK PE (Shock / Category E)

 IMMEDIATE SYSTEMIC THROMBOLYSIS::Do NOT delay thrombolysis for imaging if unstable

  • Alteplase (rtPA):
    • 100 mg over 2 hrs
      OR
    • 50 mg bolus (during cardiac arrest)

 Cardiac Arrest (PE suspected)

  • Give bolus thrombolysis during CPR
  • Continue CPR ≥60–90 min(Time required for clot lysis and circulation restoration)

Alternative regimens (used in practice):

  • 0.6 mg/kg over 15 min (max 50 mg)
     Used in selected cases (lower bleeding risk strategy)

If thrombolysis contraindicated:

  • Catheter-directed therapy
  • Surgical embolectomy
  • VA-ECMO (bridge)

 C. IMPENDING COLLAPSE (Category D)

 Treat aggressively (early thrombolysis)

 Contraindications to Systemic Thrombolysis (PE)

ABSOLUTE CONTRAINDICATIONS

RELATIVE CONTRAINDICATIONS

Prior intracranial hemorrhage (ICH)

Severe uncontrolled HTN (>180/110 mmHg)

Known intracranial neoplasm / AVM / aneurysm

Recent surgery (<10 days)

Ischemic stroke <3 months

Recent internal bleeding (2–4 weeks)

Active bleeding / bleeding diathesis

Pregnancy / early postpartum

Suspected aortic dissection

Non-compressible vascular puncture

Recent major trauma / head injury (<3 weeks)

Traumatic CPR

Recent intracranial or spinal surgery

Advanced age (>75 years)

Platelets <50,000 / severe coagulopathy

Oral anticoagulants (high INR)

Uncontrolled active GI bleeding

Severe liver disease


Infective endocarditis


Diabetic retinopathy


 4. CATHETER-DIRECTED THERAPY (CDT)

Types:

  • Catheter thrombolysis (low-dose tPA)
  • Mechanical thrombectomy 

Catheter thrombolysis Indications 

Intermediate-high risk PE with:

  • RV dysfunction
  • Elevated troponin

Clinical deterioration:

  • Increasing oxygen need
  • Rising lactate
  • RV failure progression

Contraindication to systemic thrombolysis


B. MECHANICAL THROMBECTOMY 

Concept: Physical removal of clot WITHOUT thrombolytics

 Types:

1. Aspiration thrombectomy-Large-bore catheter suction

2. Fragmentation-Break clot into smaller pieces

3. Rheolytic systems-High-velocity saline jets

 KEY ADVANTAGE:

 No thrombolysis NO major bleeding risk

 Evidence:

  • FLARE trial (FlowTriever)
    • RV/LV ratio
    • Minimal bleeding
  • Real-world registries good safety profile

 Indications 

Intermediate-high risk PE with:

  • Bleeding risk (avoid thrombolysis)

Failed thrombolysis

Massive PE when:

  • Immediate reperfusion needed
  • Thrombolysis contraindicated

 Complications

  • Vascular injury
  • Hemolysis
  • Arrhythmias
  • Rare embolization

 5. SURGICAL EMBOLECTOMY

Indications:

  • Failed thrombolysis
  • Contraindication to thrombolysis
  • Massive PE with deterioration

Requires:Cardiothoracic setup

 6. ECMO (ADVANCED SUPPORT)

VA-ECMO Indications:

  • Refractory shock
  • Cardiac arrest
  • Bridge to embolectomy

 7. INFERIOR VENA CAVA (IVC) FILTER

Indications (STRICT):

  • Absolute contraindication to anticoagulation
  • Recurrent PE despite adequate anticoagulation

 Remove when possible

 15. LONG-TERM ANTICOAGULATION

Scenario

Duration

Provoked PE (surgery, transient risk)

3 months

Unprovoked PE

≥3–6 months (consider lifelong)

Cancer-associated

LMWH/DOAC long-term

Preferred Agents

  • DOACs preferred over warfarin
  • Warfarin if:
    • Mechanical valve
    • Severe renal failure

Prevention in ICU (VTE Prophylaxis)

Mechanical

  • Intermittent pneumatic compression
  • Graduated stockings

Pharmacologic

  • LMWH
  • UFH

Indicated for all ICU patients unless contraindicated.


 Mechanical VTE Prophylaxis

 1. Intermittent Pneumatic Compression (IPC)

cyclically inflate and deflate, mimicking physiologic venous return.

 Mechanism of Action 

1. Venous stasis (Primary mechanism)

  • External compression venous blood flow velocity (up to 200–300%)
  • Reduces Virchow’s triad: stasis

2. Endogenous fibrinolysis

  • Stimulates tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) release
  • fibrin formation

3. Venous capacitance

  • Promotes venous emptying
  • Prevents microthrombi formation

4. Improves endothelial function

  • Shear stress anti-thrombotic endothelial phenotype


 Types of IPC Devices

Type

Description

Clinical relevance

Sequential IPC

Distal proximal inflation

Most effective (physiologic flow)

Uniform compression

Same pressure throughout

Less effective

Foot pumps

Target plantar venous plexus

Orthopedic patients

Calf/thigh sleeves

Standard ICU/surgical use

Most common


 Evidence & Guidelines (2024–2026 Updates)

  • American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST)
    IPC recommended in:
    • Patients with high bleeding risk
    • As adjunct to pharmacologic prophylaxis in high-risk ICU
  • European Society of Cardiology / ICU societies
    Prefer combined IPC + anticoagulation in very high-risk patients
  • PREVENT Trial (NEJM): IPC + pharmacologic prophylaxis did NOT significantly reduce DVT vs anticoagulation alone in ICU
     BUT still used when anticoagulation is contraindicated

 Indications 

Absolute indications:

  • Active bleeding
  • Recent major surgery (neurosurgery, trauma)
  • Severe thrombocytopenia (<50,000)

Relative:

  • ICU patients with high VTE risk + temporary bleeding risk


 Contraindications

Absolute

Relative

Established DVT (risk of embolization)

Severe edema

Severe peripheral arterial disease (ABI <0.5)

Skin infection

Acute limb ischemia

Fragile skin

Complications

  • Skin breakdown / pressure ulcers
  • Nerve compression (rare)
  • Poor compliance (device removal)


 Practical ICU Points

  • Must be worn ≥18 hours/day for efficacy
  • Ensure correct size and fitting
  • Remove periodically for skin inspection
  • Combine with anticoagulation if possible (unless contraindicated)


 2. Graduated Compression Stockings (GCS)

 Elastic stockings that provide graded pressure:

  • Maximum at ankle gradually decreases proximally

 Mechanism of Action

1. Venous stasis-External pressure reduces venous pooling

2. Venous return-Enhances deep venous flow velocity

3. Venous diameter-Improves valve coaptation

 Pressure Gradient 

Level

Pressure

Ankle

~18–20 mmHg

Calf

~14–16 mmHg

Thigh

~8–10 mmHg

This gradient is key to effectiveness


Evidence & Guidelines (VERY IMPORTANT UPDATE)

  • Earlier widely used NOW more restricted
  • National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (UK):
     Avoid Graduated Compression Stockings alone in stroke patients
    (CLOTS trial skin complications, no benefit)
  • ACCP (CHEST):
    GCS less effective than IPC
    Consider only if IPC not feasible

 Indications

  • Moderate VTE risk when:
    • IPC unavailable
    • Patient intolerant to IPC
  • Adjunct in:
    • Surgical patients (orthopedic, general surgery)


 Contraindications 

Absolute

Relative

Peripheral arterial disease (ABI <0.8)

Severe edema

Critical limb ischemia

Dermatitis

Severe neuropathy

Limb deformity

Complications

  • Skin ulceration (especially elderly)
  • Pressure necrosis
  • Incorrect sizing ineffective or harmful

PHARMACOLOGICAL PROPHYLAXIS

1. LMWH (FIRST LINE)

  • Enoxaparin 40 mg SC OD

2. UFH

  • 5000 IU SC BD/TDS
     Preferred if:
  • Renal failure
  • Rapid reversal needed

3. Fondaparinux

  • Alternative if HIT risk

 WHEN NOT TO GIVE ANTICOAGULATION

  • Active bleeding
  • Platelets <50k
  • Recent hemorrhagic stroke

VTE PROPHYLAXIS IN OPD 

 WHO NEEDS IT?

1. Cancer Patients 

 Follow American Society of Clinical Oncology

Use Khorana Score

Parameter

Points

Stomach/pancreas cancer

2

Lung/lymphoma

1

Platelets >350k

1

Hb <10

1

Leukocytes >11k

1

BMI ≥35

1

 Score ≥2 prophylaxis indicated

 Drugs in OPD 

  • DOACs:
    • Apixaban
    • Rivaroxaban
  • LMWH (if high bleeding risk)

  OTHER OPD INDICATIONS 

A. PRIOR VTE + TEMPORARY RISK FACTOR

  • Example:
    • Previous DVT + immobilization at home
       Consider prophylaxis

B. PROLONGED IMMOBILITY (HOME)

  • Stroke with paralysis
  • Frail elderly bedridden

 Consider LMWH


C. PREGNANCY 

Follow Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists

Indications:

  • Previous VTE
  • Thrombophilia
  • Multiple risk factors

Drug:

  • LMWH only (NO DOACs, NO warfarin early)


A. Medical ward  Patients Padua Prediction Score

Risk Factor

Points

Active cancer

3

Previous VTE

3

Reduced mobility

3

Thrombophilia

3

Trauma/surgery (<1 month)

2

Age ≥70

1

HF/resp failure

1

MI/stroke

1

Infection/rheum disorder

1

BMI ≥30

1

Hormonal therapy

1

 ≥4 = HIGH RISK GIVE PROPHYLAXIS

B. ICU Patients

 No score required
All ICU patients = high risk by default

C. Surgical Patients Caprini Score

  • 0–1 low risk
  • 2 moderate
  • 3–4 high
  • ≥5 very high


D. Bleeding Risk Use:IMPROVE bleeding score

Major bleeding risks:

  • Platelets <50,000
  • Active bleeding
  • Recent CNS bleed
  • Severe coagulopathy
  • Recent major surgery (high-risk)