Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (deep vein thrombosis)
12,364 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty acute spinal cord injury patients were surveyed for deep venous thrombosis (DVT) by 125I fibrinogen leg scanning, impedance plethysmography (IPG), and venography. Leg scanning was a more sensitive indicator of thrombotic events than IPG or venography. IPG was a reliable indicator of accumulated thrombosis. The incidence of dvt assessed by leg scanning alone was 100 per cent. Its occurrence as determined by either of the screening techniques was found to be considerably greater than those of previous reports.
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PMID:Deep venous thrombosis in acute spinal cord injury: a comparison of 125I fibrinogen leg scanning, impedance plethysmography and venography. 93 90

Forty out of 76 patients (53%) who had suffered a cerebrovascular accident developed deep venous thrombosis of the paralysed leg, as detected with the 125I-fibrinogen technique. A further five also had thrombosis in the non-paralysed leg. A study of many predisposing risk factors provided no help either in elucidating the cause of venous thromboembolism or in identifying patients at risk of DVT as a complication of cerebrovascular accidents.
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PMID:Deep venous thrombosis of the legs after strokes. Part I--incidence and predisposing factors. 126 14

Seven out of 76 patients who had sustained a cerebrovascular accident suffered a pulmonary embolism as diagnosed at necropsy or by unequivocal antemortem criteria. A further five patients had probable embolisation diagnosed only by clinical and chest x-ray criteria. Eleven of these 12 patients had DVT as diagnosed by the 125I-fibrinogen technique. Though 125I-fibrinogen technique has its limitations, thrombosis seemed to be able to develop at several independent sites in the venous system of the leg.
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PMID:Deep venous thrombosis of the legs after strokes: Part 2-Natural history. 126 15

In a prospective, double-blind, randomized multicenter trial the efficacy and safety of low molecular weight heparin and unfractionated heparin were compared for the prevention of postoperative deep vein thrombosis in patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Six hundred and seventy-three patients were randomly allocated to the two prophylaxis groups; 20 of these, however, did not undergo surgery and did not receive any prophylaxis. Of the remaining 653 patients 323 received one subcutaneous injection of 3,000 anti-Xa units of low molecular weight heparin and 330 received subcutaneously 5,000 U heparin three times a day. Treatment was initiated 2 h preoperatively and continued for 7 to 10 days. The occurrence of DVT was determined by the 125I-labelled fibrinogen uptake test and phlebography. Venous thrombosis was diagnosed in 24 of 323 patients (7.4%) treated with low molecular weight heparin and in 26 of 330 patients (7.9%) treated with low-dose heparin. DVT of proximal veins was detected in four patients of the low molecular weight heparin group and in three patients of the low-dose heparin group. During the observation period three pulmonary emboli - one fatal and two non-fatal - occurred in patients receiving prophylaxis with low-dose heparin. No pulmonary embolism was found in patients treated with low molecular weight heparin. Both prophylactic schemes were well tolerated. Intra- and postoperative blood loss, incidence of wound hematoma, frequency and volume of intra- and postoperative blood transfusion were similar in both groups with a slight advantage for the low molecular weight heparin group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Low molecular weight heparin and prevention of postoperative thrombosis in abdominal surgery. 132 34

This study compared how Enoxaparin and unfractionated (UF) heparin influenced in vivo coagulation in patients randomized to receive, by twice daily subcutaneous injections, either 30 mg of Enoxaparin or 7500 I.U. of UF heparin after elective hip surgery. These two regimens were equally effective in reducing the incidence of post-operative deep vein thrombosis DVT. We compared the concentrations of endogenous thrombin-antithrombin III in pre- and post-surgical plasmas to determine how each prophylactic regimen influenced prothrombinase activity in vivo, and found the same concentrations of endogenous thrombin-antithrombin III in post-heparin and post-Enoxaparin plasmas. However, significantly higher concentrations of endogenous thrombin-antithrombin III were found in pre- and post-surgical plasmas of patients who developed post-operative DVT than the levels found in comparable plasmas of patients who remained DVT-negative, regardless of the drug received for prophylaxis. Human factor Xa was added to an equal volume of each patient's plasmas and the amount of added enzyme inactivated by antithrombin III measured using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for factor Xa-antithrombin III. Post-heparin and post-Enoxaparin plasmas inactivated approximately 4 times more factor Xa than the pre-surgical plasmas, regardless of the clinical outcome. Thus, before and after surgery, a higher than normal in vivo prothrombinase activity may be a significant risk factor for developing post-operative DVT.
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PMID:Prophylactically equivalent doses of Enoxaparin and unfractionated heparin inhibit in vivo coagulation to the same extent. 132 20

A survey by questionnaire was conducted amongst consultant plastic surgeons in the UK: 54 replies were received (44% response rate). Three consultants (5.5%) never used any form of DVT prophylaxis. The other 51 (94%) used some form of prophylaxis in at-risk patients. The methods used were found to be diverse. Ten respondents belonged to units with fixed policies for prophylaxis. A controlled trial is suggested to provide statistical evidence of the need for thromboembolic prophylaxis among plastic surgical patients. We believe there is a need for units to develop fixed protocols for the prevention of thromboembolism in at-risk patients.
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PMID:Thromboembolic prophylaxis in plastic surgery: an appraisal. 846 11

The efficacy of postoperative DVT prophylaxis of defibrotide and heparin calcium was evaluated in a group of 47 patients undergoing general surgery for oncological pathologies. A sub-group (24 patients) received defibrotide treatment, 400 mg b.i.d. i.m.; the second subgroup (23 patients) was treated with heparin calcium, 5000 IU b.i.d. s.c., from the day before operation until the 7th postoperative day. No postoperative thrombotic symptoms were observed in either group of patients.
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PMID:[The prevention of DVT after general surgical interventions for cancer pathology]. 143 89

Heparin clearance and pharmacodynamic response were examined in 12 patients being treated for deep venous thrombosis (DVT, 6 patients) or pulmonary embolism (PE, 6 patients). A loading dose of 70 units/kg was administered to DVT patients and 100 units/kg to PE patients followed by an initial infusion rate of 15 or 25 units/kg/h for DVT or PE patients, respectively. Heparin clearance was determined at 4, 12, and 24 h after initiating heparin therapy. The mean heparin clearance in the DVT group was 2,164 +/- 1,024 ml/h at 4 h, 2,591 +/- 1,239 ml/h at 12 h, and 2,795 +/- 1,863 m/h at 24 h. The PE patients had clearances of 1,775 +/- 494, 2,004 +/- 321, and 2,843 +/- 1,000 ml/h at 4, 12, and 24 h, respectively. The difference between the two groups was not statistically significant (p greater than 0.50). The activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) was used as a measure of heparin effect. The maximum effect (EMAX) and concentration required to attain 50% of the maximum effect (EC50) were determined for each group using the Lineweaver-Burke linearization method. The mean EMAX and EC50 for the DVT patients were 130 +/- 40.99 s and 1.01 +/- 0.70 units/ml, respectively. For the PE patients, the mean EMAX was 418 +/- 200 s and the mean EC50 was 4.32 +/- 2.81 units/ml. The difference between both groups for each parameter was statistically significant (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Altered heparin pharmacodynamics in patients with pulmonary embolism. 144 41

Deep vein thrombosis is still an underestimated and often unrecognised diseases both in Italy and abroad despite being far from rare and in spite of its severe complications and often disabilitating sequelae. It is a disease which is becoming more frequent due to increased life expectation, the larger number of operations on elderly patients, and the increased frequency of limb injuries. General and specialised surgery is often hampered by this complication. This has raised interest in a more detailed knowledge of the mechanisms leading to DVT, and the correct employment of the latest equipment which enable diagnosis to be made and daily monitoring of the disease during its evolution. But the greatest efforts must be reserved for preventive measures in order to achieve a statistically significant reduction in the incidence of the disease in operated patients. It is to be hoped that a greater awareness of thromboembolic diseases will allow this to be achieved in the future.
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PMID:[Deep vein thrombosis in surgery]. 146 22

Because the use of radioactive fibrinogen uptake test (FUT) has become questionable both for ethical (risk of virus transmission) and technical (lack of sensitivity) reasons, we investigated the potential value of two alternative methods for screening of asymptomatic deep venous thrombosis following elective digestive surgery: liquid crystal contact thermography (LCCT) and measurement of plasma concentration of D-dimer (DD), as compared with bilateral ascending phlebography. Out of 194 patients, 185 underwent phlebography on the 8th (0-19, median and range) postoperative day. Despite prophylaxis with low-molecular-weight heparin and elastic stockings, DVT was detected on phlebography in 58 legs of 45 patients. Sensitivity of LCCT with respect to the presence of DVT was 55% (n = 184 patients) or 28% (n = 368 legs) with a specificity of 67% and 82%, respectively. These poor performances were obtained despite a good interobserver agreement for the LCCT assessments (overall kappa coefficient of 0.66 between three experts). The most accurate cut-off of DD for discriminating patients with or without DVT was 3,000 micrograms/l, as determined by ROC curve analysis. Sensitivity of a DD level of more than 3,000 micrograms/l for the presence of phlebographically documented DVT on the 8th postoperative day was 89% for a specificity of 48%. Thus, LCCT cannot be used for screening of postoperative, mainly asymptomatic DVT following general surgery. On the other hand, measurement of plasma DD may be useful for initial screening, a negative result (level less than 3,000 micrograms/l) allowing to exclude DVT (negative predictive value of 93%) and a positive result (positive predictive value of 35%) requiring confirmation by phlebography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Value of liquid crystal contact thermography and plasma level of D-dimer for screening of deep venous thrombosis following general abdominal surgery. 150 99


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