© 2004 Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine
REVIEW
Diagnosing pulmonary embolism
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Professor Dr Martin Riedel
Deutsches Herzzentrum und I Medizinische Klinik, Technische Universität München, Lazarettstr 36, D-80636 München, Germany; m.riedel{at}dhm.mhn.de
Objective testing for pulmonary embolism is necessary, because clinical assessment alone is unreliable and the consequences of misdiagnosis are serious. No single test has ideal properties (100% sensitivity and specificity, no risk, low cost). Pulmonary angiography is regarded as the final arbiter but is ill suited for diagnosing a disease present in only a third of patients in whom it is suspected. Some tests are good for confirmation and some for exclusion of embolism; others are able to do both but are often non-diagnostic. For optimal efficiency, choice of the initial test should be guided by clinical assessment of the likelihood of embolism and by patient characteristics that may influence test accuracy. Standardised clinical estimates can be used to give a pre-test probability to assess, after appropriate objective testing, the post-test probability of embolism. Multidetector computed tomography can replace both scintigraphy and angiography for the exclusion and diagnosis of this disease and should now be considered the central imaging investigation in suspected pulmonary embolism.
Abbreviations: CTPA, computed tomography pulmonary angiography; DSA, digital subtraction angiography; DVT, deep venous thrombosis; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; Pa(C)O2, arterial oxygen (carbon dioxide) pressure; PO2, oxygen pressure; VTE, venous thromboembolism
Keywords: deep venous thrombosis; pulmonary embolism; venous thromboembolism; lung scanning; computed tomography; pulmonary angiography; D-dimer; compression ultrasonography; pre-test probability of disease
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