Today, I review and embed EM Quick Hits 65 “PoCUS in the diagnosis and risk stratification of pulmonary embolism”.*
*Helman, A. MacArthur, M. Chernoff, I. Rosenberg, H. Segeren, S. Long, B. Booth, K. EM Quick Hits 65 – Occipital Nerve Block, PoCUS in Pulmonary Embolism, Myelopathy, Team Resuscitation, Incidental Neutropenia, Peer Programs. Emergency Medicine Cases. June, 2025. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-june-2025/. Accessed May 20, 2026.
All that follows is from the above resource.
Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast
Matthew MacArthur on the role of occipital nerve block for the treatment of headache (1:32)
Ian Chernoff on the role of POCUS in patiens with pulmonary embolism (10:25)
Hans Rosenberg on identification and management of myelopathy in the ED (29:13)
Shawn Segeren on the importance of the recorder during resuscitations (35:27)
Brit Long on incidental neutropenia (39:20)
Kylie Booth on Emergency Medicine peer programs (49:50)
Play Podcast In A New Window (Duration: 1:08:14 — 62.5MB)
PoCUS in the diagnosis and risk stratification of pulmonary embolism
This is a companion podcast segment to our 2-part podcast on Management of Pulmonary Embolism: Management of Intermediate Risk PE, and Management of High Risk PE
POCUS may offer high-yield prognostic information for intermediate-risk PE patients with CT, as well as diagnostic information for high-risk PE patients who are too unstable for CT.
All basic PoCUS views have findings that support the diagnosis of RV strain in PE:
- Subcostal: IVC distention
- Parasternal long axis: D-sign and RV enlargement
- Apical 4-Chamber View (most useful):
- TAPSE <1.6cm (abnormal longitudinal RV contraction): Measured using M-mode placed through the lateral tricuspid annulus.
- RV free wall hypokinesis (dysfunctional radial RV contraction): More sensitive than TAPSE in detecting RV strain.
- RV to LV ratio ≥1
Basic Right Ventricle Assessment with POCUSApr 9, 2021Advanced Signs:
- Paradoxical septal motion (intraventricular septum bowing into the LV).
- McConnell’s Sign (RV free wall akinesis with apical sparing): 97-99% specificity but found in ~25% of patients with PE.
- Present in acute PE but not in chronic RV pathologies e.g. pulmonary hypertension.
- Caveat: can also be present in RV infarction.




