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Deep venous thrombosis after orthopedic surgery in adult cancer patients

✍ Scribed by Lin, Patrick P.; Graham, Dennis; Hann, Lucy E.; Boland, Patrick J.; Healey, John H.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
73 KB
Volume
68
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-4790

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✦ Synopsis


Background and objectives:

Patients with cancer and patients undergoing major orthopedic procedures are two groups at risk of deep venous thrombosis (dvt). the objective was to determine the rate of venous thromboembolic disease in patients with a malignant neoplasm and major orthopaedic surgery of the lower limb.

Methods:

The study included 169 patients. all patients were given knee-high intermittent pneumatic compression devices for prophylaxis. postoperative surveillance for thrombosis was performed on all patients with venous duplex doppler ultrasonography.

Results:

Proximal dvt occurred in 24 of 169 patients (14.2%). one patient (0.6%) developed a symptomatic, nonfatal pulmonary embolus (pe). the development of dvt was not associated with age, sex, type of surgery, type of neoplasm, location, or pathologic fracture. the addition of anticoagulant medication such as warfarin did not significantly reduce the rate of dvt in a subset of 54 patients. in three patients, the dvt occurred only in the contralateral limb, and in four patients, there were bilateral dvts.

Conclusions:

When intermittent compression boots were used for prophylaxis in conjunction with ultrasound screening, the risk of proximal dvt was substantial (14.2%), but the rate of symptomatic pe was low (0.6%).


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## Abstract ## Background Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) is a major complication of cancer and a predictor of reduced survival. The postoperative prevalence of DVT in colorectal cancer surgery is high, but the preoperative prevalence is unknown. The aim of this observational study was to estimate th