DVT Flashcards
Deep vein thrombosis
Formation of a thrombus or clot with associated inflammation; can have either a superficial (saphenous) or deep component (iliac or femoral vein)
Etiology and thrombus formation
Virchow’s triad:
- Venous stasis
- Hypercoagulability
- Endothelial damage
These 3 factors lead to: (1) Platelet aggregation, (2) clotting factors stimulated to produce fibrin, and (3) fibrin entrapment of RBCs and WBCs, and platelets adhering to vessel wall
Risk factors
DVT risk factors:
1. Previous VT or PE
- Severe infection, HF
- Oral contraceptives
- ERT or pregnancy
- Immobility – bed rest, flight travel, fractures
- Surgery
- CA
- Inherited thrombophilia
Clinical manifestations
Lower extremity VT (most common) – may or may not have unilateral leg pain, edema, pain upon touch, paresthesia, febrile (i.e. Thigh or calf)
Inferior vena cava – both legs may be edematous and cyanotic (can extend to superior vena cava)
Diagnostics
Tests:
1. Compression ultrasound (outpatient), then repeated 5-7 days later
- D-dimer (High = Clot buildup/breakdown somewhere)
- Well’s score (risk for PE development)
Medical management
PREVENTION (Low-risk immobile pts):
- Get OOB and ambulate 4-6x/day
- Change position q2h
- Elastic compression stockings – TEDs
- SCDs
- Heparin or enoxaparin SC bid/tid
ACUTE THROMBUS:
- Anticoagulants – Clot busters (Streptokinase, urokinase; must start within 3 hrs. that suspected clot is confirmed), heparin (monitor aPTT; Normal = 25-35 sec., Ideal = 46-70 sec.)
- Monitor aPTT, H&H, platelets (CBC) and D-dimer (Normal = 250 ng/dl, elevation suggests VTE)
Nursing management
- Pain management – analgesics
- Mobilize pt
- Assessment – monitor bleeding (gums, stool, urine, excessive bruising), VS, CBC, MS change, vision changes, respiratory changes
- Self-care – soft tooth brush, fall prevention
- Hydrate – stool softener
- Monitor specific labs – aPTT (Heparin), Antidote: protamine sulfate; and INR/PT (Warfarin), Antidote: vitamin K
- Notify PCP if – new bleed, changes in VS/LOC/resp. difficulty, new pain in thrombotic extremity, absence of pulse
Pt education
Promote:
1. TEDs – worn ~2 yrs. after event
- Exercise
- Hydration – decrease blood viscosity
- Diet
- Long-term anticoagulants (Warfarin) – monthly lab work, know when to call PCP (S/S: Severe HA, chest pain, facial drooping, slurred speech, change in MS), and avoidance of other drugs that cause bleeding (i.e. Aspirin, NSAIDs, herbal supplements)
Complications
- Thrombus – Usually pain in leg, claiming 100,000 people/yr.
- Post-thrombotic syndrome
- PHLEGMASIA CERULEAN DOLENS – Uncommon, severe form of VT (usually in the upper leg) causing near total blockage of blood flow, swelling, deep pain, and cyanosis; Found in late stages of CA and can lead to arterial occlusion, gangrene, and amputation
- PE – Characterized by sudden SOB, medical emergency
Post-thrombotic syndrome
Occurs after recovery of VT in 20-50% of pts despite anticoagulation therapy; often a result of chronic venous HTN
S/S: Pain, aching, heaviness, swelling, cramps, itching, paresthesia
Clinical signs: Persistent edema, hyperpigmentation, eczema, varicosities, lipodermatopigmentation
Treatment:
- Elevation of extremity at rest and night
- Grade 2 compression stockings
- Weight loss
- Increased exercise with strengthening of extremity muscles
- Pain management
- Compression pump
- Vascular interventional radiology procedure – balloon opening and stenting of narrowed vein
- Diet – encourage hydration