What can trigger clot formation?
• venous stasis, vessel injury and hypercoagulability
Whatever the origin and initial biochemical path activated, the clotting process results in the activation of a common clotting pathway which converts prothrombin to thrombin by activation of factor Xa.
What are some risk factors for DVT?
What is a hypercoagulable state?
What are some congenital causes of hypercoagulation?
When may a hypercoagulation state be suspected?
What are some acquired hypercoagulable states?
What is Virchows triad?
The formation of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is dynamic and multifactorial.
Virchow’s triad describes three contributing factors for thrombus formation; venous stasis, vascular injury, and hypercoagulability.
Although there are many risk factors for DVT all can be related to one or more of the triad
What are the most common areas for DVT formation?
What is pulmonary embolism?
• occurs when a segment of venous clot is released from the site of thrombosis and carried to the heart where it is pumped via the pulmonary artery to lodge in the decreasing sized blood vessels of the lungs.
What are the main symptoms of PE?
o Dyspnea o Hemoptysis o Pleuritic Pain o Tachycardia o Atypical Asthma
Why is ultrasound used when patients present with PE symptoms?
DVT may indirectly suggest the diagnosis of PE
• Because anticoagulation is most often the initial therapy for DVT and PE, it is reasoned that further investigation to exclude PE may not be necessary
What are the limitations of using DVT to indirectly suggest PE?
o it does not make a definitive diagnosis of PE.
o Patients can have DVT and pulmonary symptoms and/or hemodynamic instability from causes other than PE.
o normal bilateral proximal venous ultrasound scans do not rule out PE.
o Even when PE is definitively present, DVT of the proximal lower extremity veins is detectable by compression ultrasound in only 50% of patients.
What are the different modes for detect DVT?
o compression ultrasound (B-mode imaging only)
o duplex ultrasound (B-mode imaging and Doppler waveform analysis)
o color Doppler imaging alone.
Which modes of ultrasound are used and when in DVT study?
How accurate is proximal DVT study?
When is there a need for serial DVT ultrasound examination?
What are the ultrasound characteristics of DVT?
Why is colour Doppler an excellent adjunct to bmode compression?
What are the different stages of clot resolution?
acute
sub acute
chronic
Describe the ultrasound appearance of acute clot
Describe the ultrasound appearance of sub acute clot
Describe the ultrasound appearance of chronic clot
Where is superficial thrombophlebitis usually seen?
What are the clinical indications of superficial thrombophlebitis?
o Pain and induration
o Erythema around the vein
o Tender and hardened cord along the course of the affected vein.