VTE Basics & Risk - Spotting Clot Danger
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VTE: Spectrum of diseases from Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT) to Pulmonary Embolism (PE).
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Virchow's Triad (Pathogenesis): 📌 SHE (Stasis of blood flow, Hypercoagulability, Endothelial injury).
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Key Risk Factors for VTE:
- Inherited thrombophilias: Factor V Leiden, Prothrombin G20210A mutation, Protein C/S deficiency, Antithrombin deficiency.
- Acquired states: Major Surgery (esp. orthopedic), Trauma, Prolonged Immobility, Active Malignancy, Pregnancy/Postpartum, OCPs/HRT, Advanced Age (>60), Obesity (BMI >30 kg/m²).
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Risk Stratification Scores (Purpose):
- Padua Prediction Score: Identifies high-risk medical inpatients needing prophylaxis.
- Caprini Score: Guides VTE prophylaxis decisions in surgical patients.
⭐ Factor V Leiden is the most common inherited thrombophilia in Caucasian populations, predisposing to DVT.
VTE Prophylaxis - Shielding from Clots
Primary Goal: Prevent VTE development in hospitalized or at-risk individuals.
- Pharmacological Prophylaxis:
- LMWH: Enoxaparin 40mg SC OD; 30mg SC BD in specific orthopedic surgery.
- UFH: 5000U SC BD/TDS.
- Fondaparinux: 2.5mg SC OD.
- DOACs (esp. post-ortho): Rivaroxaban 10mg OD, Apixaban 2.5mg BD.
- Mechanical Prophylaxis:
- Graduated Compression Stockings (GCS), Intermittent Pneumatic Compression (IPC) devices.
- Indicated when anticoagulants are contraindicated (e.g., high bleeding risk).
- Contraindications to Anticoagulation:
- Active major bleeding, severe thrombocytopenia (<50,000/µL), recent major surgery at a critical site (e.g., intracranial, spinal).
⭐ For patients with CrCl <30 mL/min, UFH or dose-adjusted LMWH is preferred for prophylaxis.
VTE Diagnosis - Finding Hidden Clots
DVT Diagnosis:
- Symptoms: Unilateral leg swelling, pain, warmth, erythema. Homan's sign (unreliable).
- Algorithm:
- Pre-test probability: Wells (DVT: L <1, M 1-2, H >2).
- D-dimer: If Wells low/moderate.
- Compression Ultrasound (CUS): Primary tool.
PE Diagnosis:
- Symptoms: Dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, cough, hemoptysis, tachycardia, syncope.
- Algorithm:
- Pre-test probability: Wells (PE: L <2, M 2-6, H >6), Geneva.
- PERC rule: Low PTP & 8 PERC criteria neg → PE out.
- D-dimer: If PERC+ or mod PTP.
- CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA): Gold standard.
- V/Q scan: If CTPA C/I.
- ECG: S1Q3T3 (classic, rare).
- CXR: Often normal; Westermark, Hampton's.
⭐ A negative PERC rule in a low-risk patient for PE obviates the need for D-dimer testing.

VTE Management - Active Clot Combat
- Principles: Anticoagulation mainstay. Rapid initiation.
- DVT:
- Proximal: LMWH/UFH/Fondaparinux → VKA (target INR 2-3), OR DOAC monotherapy (e.g., Rivaroxaban, Apixaban - loading/maintenance doses).
- PE:
- Risk Stratify: PESI/sPESI score, hemodynamics.
- Low-Risk PE: Anticoagulation (as for DVT).
- Massive PE (High-Risk, Unstable): Systemic thrombolysis (e.g., Alteplase 100mg IV over 2h). Alternatives: catheter-directed lysis, surgical embolectomy.
- Submassive PE (Intermediate-Risk, Stable + RV dysfunction/necrosis): Anticoagulation. Consider thrombolysis if deteriorating.
- Duration of Anticoagulation:
- Provoked VTE (transient risk factor): 3 months.
- Unprovoked VTE/Ongoing risk (e.g., cancer): Extended/indefinite.
- IVC Filters: Limited role (e.g., absolute anticoagulation contraindication with proximal DVT/PE).
⭐ For cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT), LMWH or DOACs (Edoxaban, Rivaroxaban, Apixaban) are preferred over VKAs.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Wells score is vital for DVT/PE pre-test probability.
- D-dimer helps exclude VTE in low clinical probability cases.
- LMWH (e.g., Enoxaparin) is standard for VTE prophylaxis in medical inpatients.
- Unprovoked VTE requires anticoagulation for ≥3-6 months, often extended.
- DOACs are increasingly first-line for VTE treatment, preferred over Warfarin.
- Massive PE with hemodynamic instability needs urgent thrombolysis or embolectomy.
- IVC filters for acute VTE if anticoagulation is absolutely contraindicated_
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