Pulmonary Edema 

Definition 

Pulmonary edema is the abnormal accumulation of fluid in the lung interstitium and alveoli, leading to impaired gas exchange and hypoxemia.

Classification

1. Based on Mechanism

Type

Mechanism

Examples

Cardiogenic (Hydrostatic)

Pulmonary capillary hydrostatic pressure

LV failure, MI

Non-cardiogenic (Permeability)

Capillary permeability

ARDS, sepsis

Mixed

Both mechanisms

Sepsis + LV dysfunction

2. Based on Time Course

  • Acute pulmonary edema (APE) life-threatening emergency
  • Chronic pulmonary congestion seen in chronic HF

Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema

Primary driver: Pulmonary capillary pressure (>18 mmHg)

Sequence:

  1. LV dysfunction LVEDP
  2. Left atrial pressure
  3. Pulmonary venous pressure
  4. Fluid interstitium alveoli

 Non-Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema (ARDS-type)

  • Normal/low PCWP (<18 mmHg)
  • Capillary permeability
  • Protein-rich fluid alveoli
  • Loss of surfactant alveolar collapse

 Etiology

 Cardiogenic Causes

  • Acute MI
  • Acute decompensated heart failure
  • Severe hypertension
  • Valvular disease (MR, AR, MS)
  • Arrhythmias (AF with RVR)

 Non-Cardiogenic Causes

  • ARDS (sepsis, trauma)
  • Aspiration
  • TRALI
  • Neurogenic pulmonary edema
  • High altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE)
  • Acute kidney failure (fluid overload)

 Clinical Features

Symptoms

  • Severe dyspnea (orthopnea, PND)
  • Cough with pink frothy sputum
  • Anxiety, air hunger

Signs

System

Findings

General

Tachypnea, diaphoresis

CVS

S3 gallop (cardiogenic)

RS

Bilateral crepitations, wheeze (“cardiac asthma”)

Severe

Hypoxia, altered sensorium

 Investigations

1. Bedside

  • SpO₂
  • ABG:
    • Early: respiratory alkalosis
    • Late: respiratory acidosis

2. Imaging

Chest X-ray Findings

  • Cardiomegaly (cardiogenic)
  • Bat-wing pattern(Bilateral, symmetric perihilar opacities),
  • Kerley B lines
  • Pleural effusion

Stage

Finding

Interstitial edema

Kerley B lines, peribronchial cuffing

Alveolar edema

Bat-wing pattern appears

 Why Perihilar (Central) Distribution? — THE REAL QUESTION

A. Anatomy of Pulmonary Blood Flow

  • Hilar region = maximum vascular density
  • More capillaries more fluid leak

B. Gravity & Perfusion

  • Central lung zones receive higher blood flow
  • Hence higher hydrostatic pressure

C. Lymphatic Drainage Pattern

  • Peripheral lung fields have better lymphatic clearance initially
  • So fluid accumulates centrally first

Feature

Cardiogenic Edema

Non-cardiogenic (ARDS)

Distribution

Central (bat-wing)

Peripheral

Heart size

Enlarged

Normal

Kerley B lines

Present

Rare

Pleural effusion

Common

Less common

3. Echocardiography

  • EF assessment
  • Valvular pathology
  • Diastolic dysfunction

4. Hemodynamics (Swan-Ganz)

Parameter

Cardiogenic

Non-cardiogenic

PCWP

(>18 mmHg)

Normal (<18)

Cardiac output

Normal/

5. Biomarkers

  • BNP/NT-proBNP cardiogenic
  • Troponin MI


 Management 

 Acute Pulmonary Edema (ICU Emergency)

 1. Position

  • Propped-up (Fowler’s position) venous return

 2. Oxygen & Ventilation

Modality

Indication

Oxygen

Mild

NIV (CPAP/BiPAP)

First-line (reduces intubation, mortality)

Mechanical ventilation

Severe hypoxia/fatigue

 3. Pharmacological Therapy

Loop Diuretics

  • Furosemide
    • Dose: 20–40 mg IV (titrate)
    • Effect: preload

 Vasodilators (Key Therapy)

  • Nitroglycerin (IV)
    • First-line in hypertensive APE
    • preload & afterload

 Morphine ( Now controversial)

  • Use limited (respiratory depression risk)

 Inotropes (if shock)

  • Dobutamine
  • Noradrenaline (if hypotension)

 4. Fluid Management

  • Strict input-output
  • Avoid fluid overload

 5. Treat Underlying Cause

  • MI revascularization
  • Arrhythmia control
  • Valvular surgery

 Special Situations

 Flash Pulmonary Edema

  • Sudden onset
  • Severe hypertension
  • Requires high-dose nitrates + NIV


Neurogenic Pulmonary Edema

  • CNS injury sympathetic surge
  • Management: supportive

 High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE)

  • Hypoxia-induced vasoconstriction
  • Treatment:
    • Oxygen
    • Descent
    • Nifedipine