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)

A retrospective study of 192 patients operated on by three members of the Edward Wilson Colon and Rectum Unit, Sydney Hospital, was carried out. All operations performed involved dissection within the pelvis. Prophylactic administration of low-dose heparin was used for 71 of these patients. The incidences of clinical thromboembolic disease were 7 per cent in both the group receiving heparin and the other group. In slightly more than half of the patients, pulmonary emboli occurred in the absence of peripheral deep venous thrombosis. It is suggested that the source of these emboli was thrombosis arising in the pelvic veins.
Dis Colon Rectum 1978 Oct
PMID:Prophylactic administration of low-dose heparin in colorectal surgery. 71 Feb 39

The operative courses of 294 elective consecutive colorectal resections were reviewed in order to evaluate the morbidity and mortality of postoperative thromboembolic complications. All patients received low-dose heparin prophylaxis. Fifty-seven patients were screened for deep venous thrombosis with the fibrinogen uptake test, and treatment of thromboembolism was started if the diagnosis was established by venography and/or pulmonary scintigraphy. Neither the morbidity nor mortality from clinical thromboembolic complications was lowered in the group of patients who were screened. Rectal surgery seems to carry a higher risk of postoperative thromboembolic complications than colon surgery, and thromboembolic complications are responsible for about half of the postoperative deaths following elective colorectal surgery.
Dis Colon Rectum 1988 May
PMID:Failure in prophylactic management of thromboembolic disease in colorectal surgery. 336 38

A group of 230 patients undergoing elective colorectal surgery was analyzed for the presence of deep venous thrombosis (DVT). Prophylaxis against DVT was practiced with low-dose heparin (either 5000 IU every eight hours, or 5000 IU every 12 hours for seven days) in 199 patients. Prevention of infection was attempted with preoperative administration of Enterobiotic in 155 patients and of Vibramycin in 11 patients. DVT was diagnosed in 46 patients. The frequency of DVT did not differ significantly between patients who underwent resections of the colon and those who underwent rectal surgery. DVT was diagnosed in 27 of the 73 infected patients, which was significantly higher than the incidence of 19 with DVT among the 157 uninfected patients. The frequency of DVT among patients in the two heparin regimens was 15 and 17 per cent respectively, which was significantly lower than with untreated patients. No lethal pulmonary embolism was found and no patient showed clinical signs of embolism. It is assumed that measures aimed at reducing postoperative infection, combined with low-dose heparin, will reduce the incidence of postoperative DVT after colorectal surgery.
Dis Colon Rectum 1982 Sep
PMID:Prophylaxis of deep venous thrombosis in colorectal surgery. 711 60