Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis - Clot Patrol Kickoff
- VTE: Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT) & Pulmonary Embolism (PE). Prevention is key.
- Pathogenesis: Virchow's Triad (📌 SHE):
- Stasis (e.g., immobility, paralysis)
- Hypercoagulability (e.g., malignancy, thrombophilia, OCPs)
- Endothelial injury (e.g., surgery, trauma, central lines)
- Major Risk Factors:
- Surgery (orthopedic, major general, neurosurgery)
- Trauma (major, spinal cord injury)
- Immobility (bed rest >3 days)
- Active cancer
- Prior VTE
- Age >40 (risk ↑ with age)
- Obesity (BMI >30 kg/m²)

⭐ VTE is a leading cause of preventable hospital deaths worldwide, making prophylaxis critical in at-risk patients an exam favourite topic for scenarios on post-operative complications or immobile medical patients.
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis - Risk Radar On
- VTE risk stratification is crucial for appropriate prophylaxis.
- Surgical Patients: Utilize the Caprini Score.
- Assesses individual risk factors to guide LMWH, UFH, or mechanical prophylaxis.
- Medical Patients: Employ the Padua Prediction Score.
- Identifies high-risk hospitalized medical patients needing pharmacologic prophylaxis.
⭐ The Padua Prediction Score of ≥4 indicates high risk for VTE in medical patients, warranting pharmacologic prophylaxis unless contraindicated.
- Low risk: Early ambulation.
- Moderate/High risk: Pharmacological (LMWH, UFH) +/- mechanical methods (IPC).
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis - Drug Power-Plays
- Unfractionated Heparin (UFH)
- Dose: 5000 IU SC q8-12h.
- Reversal: Protamine sulfate.
- ⚠️ Key risks: HIT, bleeding.
- Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH) (e.g., Enoxaparin)
- Dose: Enoxaparin 40mg SC OD (standard); 30mg SC BD (high-risk ortho).
- Reversal: Protamine sulfate (partial).
- ⚠️ Adjust for CrCl <30 mL/min; lower HIT risk vs UFH.
- Direct Oral Anticoagulants (DOACs) (e.g., Rivaroxaban, Apixaban)
- Dose: Rivaroxaban 10mg OD (post-op ortho).
- Reversal: Specific agents (Andexanet alfa, Idarucizumab).
- ⚠️ Drug interactions; caution in renal/hepatic impairment.
- Fondaparinux (Synthetic pentasaccharide)
- Dose: 2.5mg SC OD.
- No specific reversal agent.
- ⚠️ Contra: CrCl <30 mL/min, body weight <50kg.
⭐ LMWH is generally preferred over UFH for perioperative VTE prophylaxis due to predictable pharmacokinetics and lower HIT risk.
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis - Squeeze & Prevent
Non-pharmacological methods are crucial, especially with high bleeding risk or when anticoagulants are contraindicated.
- Mechanical Prophylaxis:
- Graduated Compression Stockings (GCS): Apply 18-21 mmHg at the ankle, decreasing proximally.
- Intermittent Pneumatic Compression (IPC) devices: Sequentially inflate and deflate sleeves, mimicking the calf muscle pump to enhance venous return.
- Venous Foot Pumps (VFP): For immobile patients.
- Early Ambulation: Encourage as soon as feasible post-operatively.

⭐ IPC devices are generally more effective than GCS alone for VTE prevention in moderate to high-risk surgical patients, especially if pharmacologic prophylaxis is contraindicated due to bleeding risk.
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis - OR Clot Blockers
- Pharmacological Timing:
- LMWH: Start 12h pre-op or 6-12h post-op. Hold 24h pre-procedure.
- UFH: Start 2h pre-op or 4-6h post-op. Hold 4-6h pre-procedure.
- Bridging (Warfarin): Stop 5 days pre-op. Bridge if INR < 2.0 or high VTE risk. Resume post-op, overlap till INR therapeutic.
- Mechanical: IPC/GCS for high bleeding risk or as adjunct.
- Duration: Until mobile; extended (up to 28-35 days) for high-risk (e.g., major ortho, cancer).
⭐ DOACs: Stop 24-96h pre-op based on drug, renal function, & bleed risk. E.g., Dabigatran (renal clearance) often needs longer hold vs. Apixaban/Rivaroxaban.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Risk stratification (e.g., Caprini score) is crucial to determine VTE prophylaxis.
- Early ambulation is a key non-pharmacological measure for all patients.
- LMWH is generally preferred over UFH for surgical prophylaxis.
- Extended prophylaxis (up to 28-35 days) for high-risk surgeries (e.g., major cancer, hip/knee arthroplasty).
- Mechanical prophylaxis (IPC devices) is essential for patients with high bleeding risk.
- Aspirin alone is inadequate for VTE prevention in moderate-high risk surgical patients.
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