EBQ:Wells PE Rule Out

Revision as of 04:52, 24 April 2014 by Ostermayer (talk | contribs)
incomplete Journal Club Article
Wells PS et al. "Excluding Pulmonary Embolism at the Bedside without Diagnostic Imaging: Management of Patients with Suspected Pulmonary Embolism Presenting to the Emergency Department by Using a Simple Clinical Model and D-Dimer". Annals of Internal Medicine. 2001. 135(2):98-107.
PubMed Full text PDF

Clinical Question

Conclusion

Major Points

Study Design

Population

Patient Demographics

Inclusion Criteria

Exclusion Criteria

Interventions

Outcomes

Primary Outcome

Secondary Outcomes

Subgroup analysis

Criticisms & Further Discussion

Review Questions

1 The utility of a quantitative D-dimer test is greatest in which of the following patients suspected of a pulmonary embolism?

Patients with a low pre-test probability
Patients with an intermediate pre-test probability
Patients with a high pre-test probability

2 In which of the following patients can a negative CT pulmonary angiogram (alone) exclude the diagnosis of PE?

A patient with low pretest probability who required additional diagnostic testing because of a positive D-dimer
A patient with an intermediate pretest probability with a negative CT pulmonary angiogram in whom you are still concermed for PE
A patient with an intermediate pretest probability with a negative d-dimer and a negative CT pulmonary angiogram
Neither of the above

3 When would venous ultrasound be indicated as the initial imaging modality when you are evaluating a person with symptoms consistent with PE?

Patients with obvious signs of DVT for whom venous ultrasound is readily available
Patients with borderline renal insufficiency
Patients with CT contrast agent allergy
Pregnant patient
All of the above