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    Subjects/Surgery/Uncategorised
    Uncategorised
    medium
    scissors Surgery

    A patient presents with dyspnea and tachycardia 7 days after undergoing knee replacement surgery. Which investigation will confirm the diagnosis?

    A. CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA)
    B. D-dimer
    C. Chest X-ray
    D. V/Q ratio

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: A. CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA) The clinical presentation of dyspnea and tachycardia 7 days post-operatively in a knee replacement patient is classic for **venous thromboembolism (VTE)**, specifically pulmonary embolism (PE). Orthopedic surgery, particularly lower limb procedures, carries one of the highest VTE risks due to endothelial injury, venous stasis, and hypercoagulability. CTPA is the gold-standard confirmatory investigation for PE in modern practice. It provides direct visualization of thrombi in pulmonary arteries with high sensitivity (>95%) and specificity (>95%), allowing risk stratification and guiding anticoagulation decisions. Unlike screening tests, CTPA definitively confirms the diagnosis and enables immediate therapeutic intervention—critical in a hemodynamically unstable or high-risk patient. Indian guidelines (ACCP recommendations adopted in Indian practice) recommend CTPA as the first-line imaging modality when PE is clinically suspected and the patient can tolerate contrast administration. The timing (post-operative day 7) and risk factors (immobility, surgical trauma, orthopedic procedure) make PE the leading differential diagnosis requiring definitive confirmation. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. D-dimer** — D-dimer is a **screening tool**, not a confirmatory test. While elevated D-dimer has high sensitivity for VTE, its specificity is poor—it rises in infection, inflammation, post-operative states, and malignancy, making it unreliable for diagnosis. In post-operative patients, D-dimer is almost always elevated, rendering it clinically useless for confirmation. It is used to *exclude* PE in low-risk patients, not to confirm it. NBE trap: students confuse 'elevated D-dimer = PE' with 'D-dimer confirms PE'—it does not. **C. Chest X-ray** — CXR is insensitive and non-specific for PE. It may show non-specific findings (atelectasis, pleural effusion, Hampton's hump in rare cases of infarction) but cannot visualize pulmonary arteries or thrombi. CXR is useful to exclude other diagnoses (pneumonia, pneumothorax, heart failure) but does not confirm PE. In post-operative patients, CXR findings are often confounded by post-operative changes, making it unreliable for PE diagnosis. It is a screening tool at best, not confirmatory. **D. V/Q ratio** — V/Q scan (ventilation-perfusion imaging) was historically used for PE diagnosis but is now largely obsolete in modern practice, especially in India where CTPA availability is widespread. V/Q scans have lower sensitivity and specificity than CTPA, produce many indeterminate results, and cannot localize thrombi precisely. They are contraindicated in patients with underlying lung disease (common post-operatively). CTPA has replaced V/Q scanning as the standard of care. NBE trap: older textbooks mention V/Q scans, but current guidelines favor CTPA. ## High-Yield Facts - **Orthopedic surgery (hip/knee replacement)** carries VTE risk of 40–60% without prophylaxis; PE typically presents 3–7 days post-operatively. - **CTPA** is the gold-standard confirmatory test for PE with >95% sensitivity and specificity; directly visualizes thrombi in pulmonary arteries. - **D-dimer** is a screening tool (high sensitivity, low specificity) used to *exclude* PE in low-risk patients, not to confirm it; elevated in all post-operative states. - **Virchow's triad** (endothelial injury, venous stasis, hypercoagulability) is maximally present after orthopedic surgery, explaining high VTE incidence. - **ACCP guidelines** recommend CTPA as first-line imaging when PE is clinically suspected; V/Q scan reserved for patients with contrast allergy or renal failure. ## Mnemonics **POST-OP VTE RISK: SORT** **S**urgery (orthopedic > general > others) | **O**besity | **R**ecent immobility | **T**hrombophilia. Orthopedic surgery is the highest-risk category for VTE. **PE DIAGNOSIS: CTPA > Others** **C**onfirms diagnosis (direct visualization) | **T**hrombi localized | **P**recise risk stratification | **A**ction-guiding (anticoagulation). D-dimer screens; CXR excludes mimics; V/Q is obsolete. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs post-operative dyspnea with D-dimer elevation to trap students into choosing D-dimer as 'confirmatory'—students must distinguish between screening (D-dimer) and diagnostic (CTPA) tests. The 7-day timing and orthopedic surgery context are red herrings designed to make students think of PE but then select a non-confirmatory test. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian hospitals, post-operative VTE prophylaxis (mechanical compression, LMWH) is often inadequate in orthopedic wards due to cost constraints. A patient presenting with dyspnea on post-op day 7 after knee replacement should trigger immediate CTPA referral—delay in confirmation risks hemodynamic collapse. Early CTPA-guided anticoagulation is life-saving. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 29 (Venous Thromboembolism); Harrison Ch. 298 (Pulmonary Embolism); ACCP Guidelines 10th Edition (adopted in Indian practice)_

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