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A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses

BACKGROUND: Postoperative asymptomatic deep venous thromboses (ADVT) can give rise to posttthrombotic syndrome (PTS), but there are still many unresolved issues in this context. For example, there is a lack of knowledge regarding the fate of small ADVT following minor orthopedic surgery. This follow...

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Autores principales: Rosfors, Stefan, Persson, Lena M, Lärfars, Gerd, Lapidus, Lasse J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20819203
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-8-4
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author Rosfors, Stefan
Persson, Lena M
Lärfars, Gerd
Lapidus, Lasse J
author_facet Rosfors, Stefan
Persson, Lena M
Lärfars, Gerd
Lapidus, Lasse J
author_sort Rosfors, Stefan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Postoperative asymptomatic deep venous thromboses (ADVT) can give rise to posttthrombotic syndrome (PTS), but there are still many unresolved issues in this context. For example, there is a lack of knowledge regarding the fate of small ADVT following minor orthopedic surgery. This follow-up study evaluates postthrombotic changes and clinical manifestations of PTS in a group of patients with asymptomatic calf vein DVT after surgery for Achilles tendon rupture. METHODS: Forty-six consecutive patients with distal ADVT were contacted and enrolled in a follow-up consisting of a single visit at the hospital at a mean time of 5 years postoperatively, including clinical examination and scoring, ultrasonography and venous plethysmography. All patients had participated in DVT-screening with colour duplex ultrasound (CDU) 3 and 6 weeks postoperatively and 80% of them were treated with anticoagulation. RESULTS: With CDU postthrombotic changes and deep venous reflux were detected at follow-up in more than 50% of the patients, more commonly in somewhat larger calf DVT:s initially affecting more than one vessel. However, only about 10% of the patients had significant venous reflux according to venous plethysmography. No patient had plethysmographic evidence of remaining outflow obstruction, but presence of postthrombotic changes shown with CDU negatively influenced venous outflow capacity measured with plethysmography. A clinical entity of PTS was rarely found and occurred only in two patients (4%) and then classified by Villalta scoring as of mild degree with few clinical signs of disease. Distal ADVT:s detected in the early postoperative period (3 weeks) showed DVT-progression in 75% of the limbs that were still immobilized and without anticoagulation. CONCLUSIONS: Asymptomatic postoperative distal DVT:s following surgery for Achilles tendon rupture have a good prognosis and a favourable clinical outcome. In our material of 46 patients the general appearance of the clinical entity of PTS at 5 years follow-up was low (<5%). Morphological and functional abnormalities were mainly seen in those patients that initially had somewhat larger distal DVT:s involving more than one deep calf vein segment.
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spelling pubmed-28508832010-04-08 A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses Rosfors, Stefan Persson, Lena M Lärfars, Gerd Lapidus, Lasse J Thromb J Original clinical investigation BACKGROUND: Postoperative asymptomatic deep venous thromboses (ADVT) can give rise to posttthrombotic syndrome (PTS), but there are still many unresolved issues in this context. For example, there is a lack of knowledge regarding the fate of small ADVT following minor orthopedic surgery. This follow-up study evaluates postthrombotic changes and clinical manifestations of PTS in a group of patients with asymptomatic calf vein DVT after surgery for Achilles tendon rupture. METHODS: Forty-six consecutive patients with distal ADVT were contacted and enrolled in a follow-up consisting of a single visit at the hospital at a mean time of 5 years postoperatively, including clinical examination and scoring, ultrasonography and venous plethysmography. All patients had participated in DVT-screening with colour duplex ultrasound (CDU) 3 and 6 weeks postoperatively and 80% of them were treated with anticoagulation. RESULTS: With CDU postthrombotic changes and deep venous reflux were detected at follow-up in more than 50% of the patients, more commonly in somewhat larger calf DVT:s initially affecting more than one vessel. However, only about 10% of the patients had significant venous reflux according to venous plethysmography. No patient had plethysmographic evidence of remaining outflow obstruction, but presence of postthrombotic changes shown with CDU negatively influenced venous outflow capacity measured with plethysmography. A clinical entity of PTS was rarely found and occurred only in two patients (4%) and then classified by Villalta scoring as of mild degree with few clinical signs of disease. Distal ADVT:s detected in the early postoperative period (3 weeks) showed DVT-progression in 75% of the limbs that were still immobilized and without anticoagulation. CONCLUSIONS: Asymptomatic postoperative distal DVT:s following surgery for Achilles tendon rupture have a good prognosis and a favourable clinical outcome. In our material of 46 patients the general appearance of the clinical entity of PTS at 5 years follow-up was low (<5%). Morphological and functional abnormalities were mainly seen in those patients that initially had somewhat larger distal DVT:s involving more than one deep calf vein segment. BioMed Central 2010-02-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2850883/ /pubmed/20819203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-8-4 Text en Copyright ©2010 Rosfors et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original clinical investigation
Rosfors, Stefan
Persson, Lena M
Lärfars, Gerd
Lapidus, Lasse J
A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title_full A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title_fullStr A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title_full_unstemmed A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title_short A follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
title_sort follow-up study of the fate of small asymptomatic deep venous thromboses
topic Original clinical investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20819203
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-9560-8-4
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