Template:PE clinical presentation: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
===Symptoms===
===Symptoms===
''According to the PIOPED II study, these are the most common presenting signs''<ref>Stein PD et al. Clinical characteristics of patients with acute pulmonary embolism: data from PIOPED II. Am J Med. 2007;120(10):871.</ref>
*[[Dyspnea]] at rest or with exertion (75-80%)
 
*[[Chest pain]] (66%)
*[[Dyspnea]] at rest or with exertion (73%)
**Pleuritic pain, pain that halts respiration, is only seen in 20% of patients
*Pleuritic [[chest pain]] (44%)
*[[Cough]]
*[[Cough]] (37%)
*[[Hemoptysis]]
*Orthopnea (28%)
*Unilateral calf swelling
*Calf or thigh pain and/or swelling (44%)
*Syncope
*[[Wheezing]] (21%)
** Syncope is caused by PE <5% of the time
*[[Hemoptysis]] (13%)


===Signs===
===Signs===
*[[Tachypnea]] (54%)
*[[Tachycardia]] (HR>100), [[Tachypnea]] (RR>20), Hypoxemia (SpO2<95%) are seen ~50% of the time
*Calf or thigh swelling, erythema, edema, tenderness, palpable cord (47%)
*Hypotension (SBP<90) only seen 10% of the time, but largest predictor of mortality
*[[Tachycardia]] (24%)
*Unilateral calf tenderness or edema, suggestive of a DVT
*Rales (18%)
*Other signs may include accentuated pulmonic component of second heart sound, JVD, or decreased breath sounds
*Decreased breath sounds (17%)
*Accentuated pulmonic component of the second heart sound (15%)
*JVD (14%)
*[[Fever]] (3%)

Revision as of 22:37, 19 April 2026

Symptoms

  • Dyspnea at rest or with exertion (75-80%)
  • Chest pain (66%)
    • Pleuritic pain, pain that halts respiration, is only seen in 20% of patients
  • Cough
  • Hemoptysis
  • Unilateral calf swelling
  • Syncope
    • Syncope is caused by PE <5% of the time

Signs

  • Tachycardia (HR>100), Tachypnea (RR>20), Hypoxemia (SpO2<95%) are seen ~50% of the time
  • Hypotension (SBP<90) only seen 10% of the time, but largest predictor of mortality
  • Unilateral calf tenderness or edema, suggestive of a DVT
  • Other signs may include accentuated pulmonic component of second heart sound, JVD, or decreased breath sounds