Venous Thrombo-Embolic Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Where do DVTs most commonly form?

A
Anterior Tibial 
Posterior Tibial
Perineal
Superficial Femoral
Popliteal
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2
Q

What are risk factors for DVT?

A
Age
Pregnancy/COCP
Trauma
Surgery
Past DVT
Cancer
Obesity
Immobility
Thrombophilia
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3
Q

What is the Well’s score?

A

Pretest clinical probability score for DVT
Based on common symptoms
>2 makes DVT/PE likely

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4
Q

What are the common symptoms of a DVT?

A
Calf Sx
-warmth
-tenderness
-swelling
-ertythrema
Fever
Pitting oedema
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5
Q

What is the D-dimer test?

A

D-dimers are increased in clotting patients

NOT SPECIFIC FOR DVT

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6
Q

What other clinical conditions could be included in the DDx for pain/swelling of the lower limb?

A
DVT
Superficial thrombo-phlebitis
Chronic venous insufficiency
Cellulitis
Acute arterial ischaemia
Hyperprotinaemia
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7
Q

Describe Superficial thrombo-phelibitis

A

Inflamed vein near the surface of the skin (caused by clot)
Lumps under skin, NOT swelling of whole calf
Cold flannel over vv will reduce pain

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8
Q

Describe Chronic venous insufficiency

A

Blood pools in legs due to damaged valves in vv
Elevated BP in vv
Leathery skin
Stasis ulcers

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9
Q

Describe Cellulitis

A

Infection of deeper layers of skin/tissue
Skin becomes red, hot, swollen, painful, tender
High temp, vig shaking before
N/V

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10
Q

Describe Acute Limb Ischaemia

A
Acute thrombotic occlusion leading to extensive tissue necrosis (<6hrs)
Pre-existing arterial disease common
6 P's
-pale
-pulseless
-painful
-paralysed
-paraesthetic
-perishingly cold
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11
Q

Describe hyperprotinaemia

A

High blood protein
Leads to peripheral oedema
Tends to be painless/

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12
Q

How can the DDx for leg pain/swelling be narrowed down? - History?

A
Rapid/acute onset?
Symptoms beforehand?
Pre-existing conditions?
Associated symptoms?
Painful/not painful?
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13
Q

How can the DDx for leg pain/swelling be narrowed down? - Examination?

A
Unilateral/bilateral
Fluid based swelling?
Tender?
Cracked/dry skin?
Reddened?
Temperature?
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14
Q

How can the DDx for leg pain/swelling be narrowed down? - Investigations?

A
Urinalysis (proteinuria)
FBC (infection/inflammation)
Clotting screen
CXR
D-dimer test (clotting)
Ultrasound
ECG/Echo
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15
Q

What imaging modalities are used to investigate suspected DVT?

A

CXR - look for pulmonary oedema/emboli
Echo - look for heart failure
Ultrasound/CT - haematoma
CT angiography

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16
Q

What are the clinical features of PE?

A
Breathlessness (acute)
Pleuritic pain
Haemoptysis
Syncope
Pyrexia
Tachypnoea
Pleural effusion
Hypotension
17
Q

What does the severity of PE depend on?

A

Depends on size/number/distribution

-small often asymptomatic, large fatal

18
Q

Describe the pathology of a PE

A

Usually arising from a venous thrombus in pelvis/legs

Clots break off - pass through venous system - R heart - pulmonary circulation

19
Q

What are some less common causes of a PE?

A
Right ventricular thrombus (post MI)
Septic emboli (RHS endocarditis)
Fat/Air/Amniotic fluid emboli
Neoplastic cells
Parasites
20
Q

What are the complications of DVT?

A

Deep venous insufficiency
PE
Post thrombotic/post phlebitic syndrome

21
Q

What is post-thrombotic syndrome?

A

Chronic venous HTN developing after a DVT (20-40%

22
Q

What are the sx of post-thrombotic syndrome?

A
Pain
Swelling
Hyperpigmentation
Dermatitis
Ulcers
Gangrene
Lipodermatosclerosis
23
Q

How should DVTs be investigated?

A

D-dimer
Compression USS (non-collapsing veins)
Thrombophilia screen

24
Q

How should DVTs be managed?

A
Mobilise pts early
Heparin for immobile pts
Stop COCP
Use compression hosiery
LMWH AND warfarin, stop LMWH when INR 2-3
25
Q

What are the main three types of PE?

A
Massive PE (5%)
Major PE (10%)
Minor PE (85%)
26
Q

Describe massive PE

A

> 60% pulmonary circulation blocked, rapid cardiovascular collapse

27
Q

Describe major PE

A

Middle sized arteries blocked, causing breathlessness, pleuritic pain and haemoptysis

28
Q

Describe minor PE

A

Small peripheral vessels blocked, pts asymptomatic or present as major PE

29
Q

How should PEs be managed?

A
Minor/Major PE as per DVT
Massive PE
   -A-E resuscitation
   -IV morphine &amp; antiemetic
   -LMWH
   -warfarin (if SBP >90)
   -vasopressors (if SBP <90)