Title: Mike Demeo
1Critical Care MM
- Mike Demeo
- Nikhil Kapila
- April 11, 2014
2Morbidity Mortality Conference
- It is for the department faculty and residents to
peer review case(s) from the inpatient service. - The primary objective is to improve overall
patient care focusing on quality of care
delivered, performance improvement, patient
safety and risk management. - This material is confidential and is utilized as
defined in Connecticut State statute 19a-17b
Section(4) for evaluating and improving the
quality of health care rendered
3Morbidity Mortality Conference
- Goals
- To review recent cases and identify areas for
improvement for (all) clinicians involved - Patient complications deaths are reviewed with
the purpose of educating staff, residents and
medical students. - To identify system issues, which negatively
affect patient care - To modify behavior and judgment and to prevent
repetition of errors leading to complications. - To assess all six ACGME competencies and
Institute of Medicine (IOM) Values in the quality
of care delivered - Conferences are non punitive and focus on the
goal of improved and safer patient care - This material is confidential and is utilized as
defined in Connecticut State statute 19a-17b
Section(4) for evaluating and improving the
quality of health care rendered
4Morbidity Mortality Conference
- Every Defect is a Treasure
- This material is confidential and is utilized as
defined in Connecticut State statute 19a-17b
Section(4) for evaluating and improving the
quality of health care rendered
5Every Defect is a Treasure
- Errors are due to
- Processes 80
- Individuals 20
- Translate all error into education
- This material is confidential and is utilized as
defined in Connecticut State statute 19a-17b
Section(4) for evaluating and improving the
quality of health care rendered
6Learning Objectives-
- What is the role for DVT prophylaxis in patients
with recent intracranial hemorrhage? - What are the roles of thrombolytics and heparin
in the management of PE? - What are the other options in treating PE?
- Embolectomy
- EKOS
7VTE in patients with a history of ICH
- DVT has been reported in 2-15 of patients with
ICH - PE occurs in 1-5 of patients
- Usually 2-4 weeks after onset of acute ICH
- Risk factors for VTE in patients with h/o ICH
- Stroke severity
- Weakness/changes in level of consciousness
- Female sex
- African Americans
8Venous Thromboembolism Prevention in the Setting
of Acute/Recent Intracranial Hemorrhage
9VTE Prevention
10VTE Prevention -Intermittent Pneumatic
Compression
- Treatment with IPC devices are associated with
lower rate of DVT - Should be instituted immediately
- CLOTS 3 Trial
- Open label, randomized study
- 2876 patients with stroke. 322 with hemorrhagic
stroke - IPC use was associated with reduced risk of DVT
at 30 days-6.7 vs 17 - No major adverse events
- IPC devices are associated with a greater
incidence of skin breaks
11VTE Prevention
12VTE Prevention-Anticoagulation
13VTE Prevention-Anticoagulation
- Meta-analysis of four studies
- Compared anticoagulation therapy with other
treatments in patients with ICH - Use of anti-coagulation was associated with a
significant reduction in Pulmonary Embolism (1.7
vs 2.9 P0.01) - Use of anti-coagulation was associated with a
non-significant reduction in DVT formation and
mortality - Non-significant increase in hematoma enlargement
- AHA/American Stroke Association
- After documentation of cessation of bleeding,
low dose subcutaneous low molecular-weight
heparin or unfractionated heparin may be
considered for prevention of venous
thromboembolism in patients with lack of mobility
after 1 to 4 days from onset
14Anticoagulation and Thrombolytics in the
Management of PE
15Initial Anticoagulation in PE
- Subcutaneous LMWH
- Subcutaneous Fondaparinux
- Intravenous UFH
16Initial Anticoagulation in PE
- SC Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH)
- Now considered better initial agent over UFH for
most hemodynamically stable patients. - Secondary to multiple randomized trials and
meta-analyses showing - Lower mortality
- Fewer recurrent thromboembolic events
- Less major bleeding events
- Non-superior to Fondaparinux.
- Monitoring none required in most patients.
17Initial Anticoagulation in PE
- SC Fondaparinux
- Recommended for most hemodynamically stable
patients. - Based on multiple studies against IV UFH
- Same effects on mortality, recurrent
thromboembolism, major bleeding. - Advantages over IV UFH
- Once or twice daily administration
- Fixed dose
- Less thrombocytopenia
- No monitoring necessary in most patients
18Initial Anticoagulation in PE
- IV Unfractionated Heparin (IV UFH)
- No longer preferred agent for stable acute PE.
- Preferred Indications
- Persistent hypotension
- Increased risk of bleeding
- Thrombolysis being considered
- Concern about subcutaneous absorption
- Renal failure
- Obese patients
- Monitoring
- aPTT
19Role of Thrombolytics in PE
- Agents
- tPA
- Naturally occurring enzyme
- Binds fibrin to enhance plasminogen activation
- Streptokinase
- Polypeptide derived from beta-hemolytic strep
- Binds to plasminogen to activate plasmin
- Urokinase
- Occurs naturally in urine
- Plasminogen activator
20Role of Thrombolytics in PE
- Indications
- Persistent hypotension lt90 mmHg SBP or decrease
in SBP gt/ 40mmHg from baseline. - Potential Indications
- Severe hypoxemia
- Large V/Q mismatch
- Extensive clot burden
- RV dysfunction
- Free-floating atrial/ventricular thrombus
- PFO
- Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
21Role of Thrombolytics in PE
22Role of Thrombolytics in PE
- Purpose Compare echo parameters and clinical
outcome of heparin vs thrombolysis in first 180
days after SPE w/ RVD. - Methods 72 consecutive patients w/ first episode
SPE and symptoms lt6 hours w/ CT proven PE and
echo proven RVD. - Results Thrombolysis group showed significant
early improvement in RV function and this
improvement was still observed through the 180
day follow up. Also noted to significant
reduction in clinical events during
hospitalization.
23Role of Thrombolytics in PE
24Role of Thrombolytics in PE
25Role of Thrombolytics in PE
- Contraindications
- Intracranial neoplasm
- Intracranial surgery/trauma (lt 2 months)
- Active or recent internal bleeding (lt 6 months)
- Hx Hemorrhagic CVA
- Non-hemorrhagic stroke (lt 2 months)
- Bleeding diathesis
- Uncontrolled HTN (gt200 sbp/110 dbp)
- Surgery (lt 10 DAYS)
- Thrombocytopenia ( lt 100, 000)
26Embolectomy in PE
27Embolectomy in PE
- Embolectomy
- Should be considered when patient presentation
warrants thrombolysis but therapy either fails or
is contraindicated. - Can be done surgically or via catheter
- Dependent upon availabilities and expertise at
each individual institution.
28Embolectomy in PE
- Surgical Embolectomy
- Requires cardiopulmonary bypass.
- Has been prompted by
- failure of initial thrombolysis
- echo evidence of thrombus in
- R atrium
- R ventricle
- PFO
- Cardiac arrest pre-surgery can be predictive of
mortality during surgery by one small study of 55
pts - 97 survival of those w/o
- 75 survival of those w/
29Embolectomy in PE
- Catheter Embolectomy
- Rheolytic (ie. AngioJet)
- Injection of pressurized saline to macerate
emboli. Fragments collected via exhaust lumen. - Requires venous cut down.
- Rotational
- Cardiac catheter equipped with a rotating device
that continuously fragments/aspirates pieces of
the thrombus. - Does not require venous cut down.
- Suction
- Uses a large lumen catheter to apply direct
negative pressure suction w/ an aspiration
syringe. - Fragmentation
- Thrombus disruption via manually rotating a
standard pigtail catheter or balloon angio
catheter against the thrombus.
30Embolectomy in PE
31Advanced Interventions Catheter Directed
Intervention
32Advanced InterventionsCatheter Directed
Intervention
- Indications for catheter based intervention in
the setting of acute massive PE should include
one of the following - Arterial hypotension. defined as systolic
arterial pressure 90 mm Hg, a drop in systolic
arterial pressure 40 mm Hg for 15 minutes, or
ongoing administration of catecholamine for the
treatment of systemic arterial hypotension - Cardiogenic shock with peripheral hypoperfusion
and hypoxia - Circulatory collapse, including syncope or need
for cardiopulmonary resuscitation - Echocardiographic findings indicating right
ventricular dilatation and/or pulmonary
hypertension - Subtotal or total filling defect in the left
and/or right main pulmonary artery determined by
chest computed tomography (CT) scan or by
conventional pulmonary angiography or - Widened arterial-alveolar O2 gradient (gt 50 mm
Hg).
33Advanced InterventionsCatheter Directed
Intervention
34Advanced InterventionsCatheter Directed
Intervention
- Meta-analysis examining 594 patients from 35
studies - Patients with acute massive PE treated with
modern CDT - Clinical success defined as stabilization of
hemodynamics, resolution of hypoxia, and survival
- Pooled clinical success rate of CDI was 86.5
- Risk of minor and major complications were 7.9
and 2.4 respectively
35Advanced Interventions-EKOS
- Ultrasound accelerated catheter directed
thrombolysis - Delivered via an infusion catheter that emits
ultrasound energy to accelerate the thrombolytic
cascade - This is achieved by using the EkoSonic
Endovascular System that is manufactured by the
EKOS corporation - Acoustic energy leads to breakdown of fibrin and
increases fibrin porosity without causing distal
embolization - This facilitates penetration of thrombolytic drugs
36Advanced Interventions-EKOS
37Advanced Interventions-EKOS
- Patients were randomized into EKOS group and
conventional CDI group who received either tPA or
urokinase - Complete thrombolysis More than 90 thrombus
removal - Near complete lysis 75-90 removal of thrombus
- Partial lysis 50-75 removal
- Follow-up pulmonary angiography performed 12-48
hours after initiation of intervention to
determine progression of thrombus disruption
38Advanced Interventions-EKOS
39Advanced Interventions-EKOS
40Advanced Interventions-EKOS
- 59 patients with acute main or lower lobe PE and
RV/LV ratio of gt1 - Randomized to receive either ultrasound assisted
catheter directed thrombolysis vs. unfractionated
heparin alone - Primary outcome was the difference in RV/LV ratio
from baseline to 24 hours - Safety outcomes included death, major or minor
bleeding, and recurrent VTE at 90 days
41Advanced Interventions-EKOS
42Advanced Interventions-EKOS
- Significant reduction in RV/LV ratio in study
group - Significant reduction in pulmonary artery and
right atrial pressures - Significant increase in cardiac index
- No recurrent VTE or hemodynamic decompensation
- No major bleeding complications. 3 patients (10)
experienced minor bleeding complications
43Advanced Interventions-EKOS
44Advanced Interventions-EKOS
45Advanced Interventions-EKOS
46References
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