Pulmonary Embolism Treatment
Some people with pulmonary embolisms do well with blood thinners, which is the current standard of care for most patients. Others, however, experience better outcomes with more aggressive treatment and interventions aimed at dissolving the blood clot.
Medication
Anticoagulant medications, also known as blood thinners, work by preventing new blood clots in the lungs from forming and existing clots from growing larger.
You can receive these drugs as an injection, either under the skin or intravenously, or as a pill.
Anticoagulant medications may include:
- Heparin
- Low molecular weight heparin
- Direct thrombin inhibitors
- Coumadin®
Thrombolysis
Your doctor at the UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute may recommend a more aggressive treatment that can be administered systemically though an intravenous line or via a catheter into the clot.
After inserting a catheter (a thin, flexible tube) into a blood vessel through a tiny nick in your groin or neck, your doctor will use x-ray guidance to advance the catheter to the site of the pulmonary embolism in the lung arteries and inject clot-dissolving medication directly to the pulmonary embolism.
Your doctor may also use a clot-dissolving medication to treat your pulmonary embolism.
Thrombectomy
Your surgeon will thread a catheter through your blood vessels to the site of the embolism and extract the blood clot.
Some people may need an additional procedure — called pulmonary embolectomy — to clear the clot.
Vena cava filter
To prevent further pulmonary embolisms from developing, your doctor may place a temporary vena cava filter — a small, metal device — in the vena cava, the body's largest vein.
Vena cava filters allow blood to flow through them, but prevent clots from passing into lung arteries.
Your surgeon may place them during other minimally invasive procedures, such as thrombolysis, and remove them later when the risk of pulmonary embolism decreases.