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All surgical patients are at risk for the development of deep venous thrombosis and subsequent pulmonary embolism or postphlebitic syndrome. The evolution of ultrasonographic imaging has increased the awareness of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of deep venous thrombosis. Duplex imaging and Doppler color flow imaging have made the diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis relatively simple, painless, inexpensive, and definitive. These procedures have gained acceptance by both patients and physicians. Several risk factors have been identified that increase the chance of the development of deep venous thrombosis. These factors include a history of deep venous thrombosis, presence of a malignant process, increasing age, cigarette smoking, obesity, prolonged bed rest, and general anesthesia. The greater the number of risk factors, the more aggressive prophylaxis should be. Means of prophylaxis have improved, and surgeons now generally agree that some form of prophylaxis is required. Heparin and intermittent compression devices appear to be equally effective in preventing deep venous thrombosis. The addition of venous monitoring in high-risk patients permits immediate identification of the presence of deep venous thrombosis. During the last decade, the treatment of patients with deep venous thrombosis has changed little. Heparin followed by warfarin remains the treatment of choice. A small group of patients receive fibrinolytic therapy for deep venous thrombosis. Although the incidence of postoperative deep venous thrombosis has decreased during the last decade, it remains a significant complication.
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PMID:Deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. 194 69

Factors contributing to deep vein thrombosis (DVT) were studied in 51 patients (62 knees) who had a cementless total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and in 51 patients (69 knees) who had a cemented TKA. All patients were treated with a primary TKA using a porous-coated anatomic prosthesis with a porous-coated central tibial stem. Deep vein thrombosis was diagnosed by roentgenographic venography, and pulmonary embolism was diagnosed by perfusion lung scanning. Incidence of DVT was 32%, and there was no pulmonary embolism. The factors that do not seem to have much relevancy to DVT were advanced age, orthopedic disease, one- or two-staged bilateral TKA, venous anatomic variations, number of venous valves, coagulation assay data, hypertension, tourniquet time, choice of cementless or cemented TKA, severity or duration of operation, amount of blood loss, and amount of blood transfused. Conversely, more immediate relevant factors were obesity, postoperative prolonged immobilization, earlier venous disease, and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Factors leading to low incidence of deep vein thrombosis after cementless and cemented total knee arthroplasty. 195 58

Although there is a critical need for effective contraception in the immediate postpartum period for women who are not breastfeeding, this need must be balanced against the inherent risks. The most effective form of contraceptive protection--oral contraceptives (OCs)--can present an increased risk of thromboembolism in the period after delivery. The thrombotic changes associated with pregnancy, and the statistics and vascular damage following a delivery, can combine to create greater potential for thromboembolism after delivery than during pregnancy. Reported here is the case of a 21-year-old woman who, 4 weeks postpartum, developed pain and swelling in the right lower calf and mottled discoloration extending from the proximal thigh to the toes. A diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis was made and heparin was administered. In the hospital, the patient experienced pleuritic chest pain and diaphoresis. A ventilation-perfusion scan indicated a pulmonary embolism. 1 week after delivery, the patient had initiated use of Triphasil. Although this woman had other risk factors (obesity, light cigarette smoking, and a sedentary life-style), OC use in the immediate postpartum period may have been the final factor precipitating the thromboembolic event. It is recommended that OC use should be delayed until at least 2 weeks postpartum in women without other risk factors for thromboembolism and until 4-6 weeks postpartum in those with such factors.
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PMID:Oral contraceptives in the immediate postpartum period. 201 Jul 44

To evaluate the relationship between maximum venous outflow (MVO) of the leg and development of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), venous occlusion plethysmography (VOP) using a Mercury strain gauge was carried out in 56 unilateral DVT patients. The data from these patients were compared with those obtained from several control groups. Then, the relationship between plethysmographic and 9 clinical variables was statistically analysed in the normal legs of these patients. The mean MVO of the normal legs of these patients was significantly higher than that of the affected legs, but it was significantly lower than those of normal controls and patients with mild congestive heart disease. However, it was similar to those in patients with lymphedema and obese men. A decrease in the MVO of the normal legs of these patients was noted in older females with femoral vein obstruction of the left leg, with a shorter number of days from the onset of symptoms or with higher values for the obesity index and calf circumference. Significant correlations between the MVO and the obesity index (r = -0.59), venous capacitance (VC, r = 0.49) and the number of days from the onset of symptoms (r = 0.40) were found in the normal right legs of these patients (n = 40). In the normal left legs (n = 16), on the other hand, significant correlations were found between the MVO and the VC (r = 0.65) and the MVO and age (r = -0.65).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Maximum venous outflow and development of deep vein thrombosis. 203 May 45

Of a random sample comprising 4581 subjects from The Copenhagen County, 3608 (79%) attended an interview and a general health examination. The subjects were defined as suffering from subjective postphlebitic syndrome if they claimed of lower extremity pain or cramps at rest and from objective postphlebitic syndrome if varicose veins, edema, lower extremity ulcers, or skin changes were present. By means of logistic regression analysis, subjective postphlebitic syndrome was found independently associated with previous thromboembolism, obesity, increasing age, female sex, hormonal therapy, varicose veins, and previous major abdominal surgery. Objective postphlebitic syndrome was associated with previous thromboembolism, obesity, former birthgiving, and high social status. The findings support the view that subclinical deep venous thrombosis in connection with previous surgery may give rise to symptoms in the lower extremities.
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PMID:Postphlebitic syndrome and general surgery: an epidemiologic investigation. 203 91

The incidence of deep vein thrombosis in 244 patients who had total knee replacement has been studied. In 120 the prosthesis was cemented and in 124 it was cementless. In all cases the replacement was primary and a porous-coated prosthesis with a porous-coated central tibial stem was used. Deep vein thrombosis was diagnosed by venography, and pulmonary embolism by perfusion scanning. The incidence of deep vein thrombosis in the cementless knees (23.8%) and in the cemented (25%) was approximately the same. The only significant predisposing factors for deep vein thrombosis in both groups were obesity, prolonged postoperative immobilisation, previous venous disease and hyperlipidaemia.
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PMID:The incidence of deep vein thrombosis after cementless and cemented knee replacement. 221 55

The authors present the results of their blind prospective comparative study of the postoperative thromboembolic protection of 490 gynecologic patients. Among them 250 (51%) were protected by a low dose heparin (LDH) subcutaneously in 12-hour intervals, 240 (49%) received heparindihydergot (HDHE). Thromboembolisms diagnosed by the 125J fibrinogen uptake test appeared in 26 (10.4%) patients protected by LDH and 23 (9.6%) by HDHE. The most frequent risk factors in patients with thromboembolisms were malignant diseases, obesity, varicose veins, hypertension and a history of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. Haemorrhages appeared in 7 (2.8%) patients protected by LDH and 8 (3.3%) by HDHE.
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PMID:[Prevention of thromboembolic disease in gynecologic surgery]. 221 51

The authors carried out an epidemiological study on a group of 10032 patients with chronic venous insufficiency, composed of 2686 males (26.77%) and 7346 females (73.23%). The case report is divided into varicose diseases (83.30%) and sequelae of deep vein thrombosis (16.70%). As well as the relationship between sex and age is considered rate of dermatological complications, with regard both to the type of venous diseases (65.54% varicose and 34.46% post-thrombotic) and to their clinical manifestations. As well as any family connection, various environmental factors are taken into account such as the patient's work, noxae iatrogenic, pregnancy and obesity.
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PMID:[Epidemiologic observations on the subject of phlebopathy of the legs and its dermatologic complications]. 223 82

Deep venous thrombosis and its complication pulmonary embolism are responsible for more than 50,000 deaths annually in the US, 2/3 of which occur postoperatively. Nearly 75% of such deaths could be avoided by adequate prophylaxis. All forms of surgery entail some risk of deep venous thrombosis, ranging from 10% after endoscopic prostate resection to over 50% for total hip replacement. 1.6 of thromboses will embolize and 1/4 of pulmonary emboli are fatal. The goal of prevention is to decrease the incidence of fatal pulmonary emboli while limiting the risks related to prevention. A secondary goal is to reduce the frequency of postthrombotic syndrome, a late complication of deep venous thrombosis which frequently causes invalidism. A preoperative evaluation of risks of deep venous thrombosis and of the likelihood of bleeding problems should be followed by selection of appropriate preventive measures. The evaluation should be repeated postoperatively, taking into account such factors as the duration of the intervention, the diagnosis, and the predicted duration of bed rest. Evaluation of the risk of deep venous thrombosis requires knowledge of its etiopathogenesis. Deep venous thrombosis results from a multifactorial process involving venous stasis, lesion of the vascular wall, and anomalies of blood composition. All the clinical risk factors for deep venous thrombosis are related to 1 or more of these elements. Risk factors related to stasis include immobilization, postoperative or postpartum status, pregnancy, and Cockett's syndrome. Risk factors related to lesions of the vascular wall include hip surgery, trauma, age, sepsis, varices and obesity, and postthrombotic syndrome. Risk factors related to blood anomaly include postoperative status, pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, cancer, nephrotic syndrome, hypercoagulability, trauma, and heredity. The most common clinical risk factors for deep venous thrombosis are age, surgical intervention, trauma, burns, cancer, pregnancy and delivery, oral contraceptive use, varices, obesity, and postthrombotic syndrome. The relative risk of deep venous thrombosis among OC users is 4.0 overall and higher for those with type A blood. The pathogenic mechanisms are similar to those of pregnancy except that the fibrinolytic capacity is not change. The principal mechanism is perhaps the declining level of antithrombin III, observed with estrogens and some progestins. Among methods of prevention are different forms of compression, use of heparin alone or in combination with other drugs, and oral anticoagulants.
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PMID:[Epidemiology and etiopathogenesis of deep venous thrombosis of the lower limbs]. 224 Apr 6

Duplex Doppler ultrasound has come to play a central role in the diagnosis of a broad spectrum of vascular diseases such as carotid artery occlusive disease and deep vein thrombosis. The role of duplex Doppler in the evaluation of intra-abdominal vascular disease remains unclear. This article summarizes the current status of duplex scanning in the investigation of the mesenteric arteries, the renal arteries, and the portal venous system. The examination is technically demanding, operator-dependent, time-consuming, and frequently unsatisfactory due to bowel gas, obesity, complex anatomy, or postoperative alterations in the normal anatomic patterns. Its advantages reside primarily in the absence of toxicity and in the generation of physiologic as well as anatomic information. In centers with the proper instrumentation and a skilled technician, duplex examination can be useful in the diagnosis and management of abdominal vascular disease and avoids the inherent dangers of contrast angiography.
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PMID:Current status of duplex Doppler ultrasound in the examination of the abdominal vasculature. 225 21


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