Journal of intensive care medicineReview
09 Jan 2025
The unprimed right ventricle is exquisitely sensitive to acute elevations in afterload. High pulmonary vascular tone incurred with acute pulmonary embolism has the potential to induce obstructive shock and circulatory collapse.
While emergent pulmonary reperfusion is essential in severe circumstances, an important subset of pulmonary embolism patients may exhibit a less extreme presentation posing a management dilemma.
As intensive care therapies have the potential to both salvage and harm the failing right ventricle, a keen understanding of the pathophysiology is requisite in the care of the contemporary patient with hemodynamically significant pulmonary embolism.
Here, we review right ventricular pathophysiology, an approach to risk stratification, and offer guidance on the medical and mechanical supportive and therapeutic strategies for the critically ill patient with acute pulmonary embolism.
Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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