Deep Vein Thrombophlebitis

Basics

Description

  • Development of blood clot within the deep veins of the body, usually as a result of surgery or trauma to blood vessels, accompanied by inflammation of the vessel wall
  • Major clinical consequences are embolization (usually to the lung), recurrent thrombosis, and postphlebitic syndrome.

Epidemiology

  • Age- and gender-adjusted incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) is 100 times higher in the hospital than in the community. Almost half of all VTEs occur either during or soon after discharge from a hospital stay or surgery.
  • 10–30% of patients diagnosed with deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and/or pulmonary embolism (PE) will die within 1 month of diagnosis.
  • 1/3 (about 33%) of people with DVT/PE will have a recurrence within 10 years.
  • Of patients with VTE, 20% are complicated with PE. The 28-day DVT fatality rate is 5.4%; at 1 year, 20%; at 3 years, 29%.

Incidence

  • In the United States, VTE incidence is 50.4/100,000 person per year.
  • Increased incidence in Caucasian and African American populations and with aging
  • Most common site: lower extremity DVT
  • Incidence in pregnancy: ~0.5 to 3/1,000
  • 1–5% of central venous catheters are complicated by thrombosis.

Prevalence

  • Variable; depends on medical condition or procedure
  • At the time of DVT diagnosis, as many as 40% of patients also have asymptomatic PE; conversely, 30% of patients diagnosed with PE do not a have demonstrable source.
  • Present in 11% of patients with acquired brain injury entering neurorehabilitation

Etiology and Pathophysiology

Factors involved may include venous stasis, endothelial injury, and hypercoagulability (Virchow triad).

Genetics

  • Factor V Leiden, the most common thrombophilia, is found in 5% of the population and in 10–65% of all VTE events and increases VTE risk 3- to 6-fold.
  • Prothrombin G20210A is found in 3% of Caucasians; increases the risk of thrombosis ~3-fold

Risk Factors

  • Acquired: COVID-19 infection (up to 3 months after acute infection), previous DVT, cancer, immobilization, trauma, traumatic brain injury, recent major surgery, medications (oral/transdermal contraceptives, estrogens, tamoxifen, glucocorticoids), obesity, smoking, antiphospholipid syndrome, acute infectious process, thrombocytosis, pregnancy/puerperium, central venous catheters, inflammatory bowel disease
  • Hereditary: deficiencies of protein C, protein S, or antithrombin III; factor V Leiden R506Q, prothrombin G20210A mutation, dysfibrinogenemia, elevated factor VIII activity, hyperhomocysteinemia

General Prevention

  • Mechanical thromboprophylaxis for patients with high bleeding risk
  • For acutely ill and for critically ill hospitalized patients at increased risk of thrombosis, low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH), low-dose unfractionated heparin, or fondaparinux is recommended.

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