R H Bhogal1, I K Nyamekye. 1. The Vascular Unit, Worcestershire Royal Hospital, Worcester, UK. balsin@hotmail.com
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a serious complication of varicose vein surgery, with attendant risks of pulmonary embolization. Prospective duplex screening identifies DVT in 5% of patients compared to clinical incidence of approximately 1%. Universal duplex screening is costly, and the benefits of diagnosing subclinical DVT are unproven. This study evaluates whether a policy of using clinical indications (leg swelling) to determine the need for duplex imaging is safe after varicose vein surgery. METHODS: Patients undergoing varicose vein surgery over a 4-year period were studied. Postoperative venous duplex imaging was performed if leg swelling occurred within 6 weeks of surgery. Long-term follow-up was performed to detect any missed occurrence of clinical DVT or pulmonary embolism. RESULTS: A total of 411 patients had 491 leg operations with 80 bilateral procedures (27%); 29 patients with leg swelling underwent duplex imaging, 5 of whom had duplex-proven DVT. No patient without early clinical signs went on to develop clinical DVT on long-term follow-up. CONCLUSION: A policy of using clinical signs as a triage for duplex imaging detected all clinically significant DVTs and generated manageable workloads for our vascular laboratory.
OBJECTIVES:Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a serious complication of varicose vein surgery, with attendant risks of pulmonary embolization. Prospective duplex screening identifies DVT in 5% of patients compared to clinical incidence of approximately 1%. Universal duplex screening is costly, and the benefits of diagnosing subclinical DVT are unproven. This study evaluates whether a policy of using clinical indications (leg swelling) to determine the need for duplex imaging is safe after varicose vein surgery. METHODS:Patients undergoing varicose vein surgery over a 4-year period were studied. Postoperative venous duplex imaging was performed if leg swelling occurred within 6 weeks of surgery. Long-term follow-up was performed to detect any missed occurrence of clinical DVT or pulmonary embolism. RESULTS: A total of 411 patients had 491 leg operations with 80 bilateral procedures (27%); 29 patients with leg swelling underwent duplex imaging, 5 of whom had duplex-proven DVT. No patient without early clinical signs went on to develop clinical DVT on long-term follow-up. CONCLUSION: A policy of using clinical signs as a triage for duplex imaging detected all clinically significant DVTs and generated manageable workloads for our vascular laboratory.
Authors: P S Wells; J Hirsh; D R Anderson; A W Lensing; G Foster; C Kearon; J Weitz; R D'Ovidio; A Cogo; P Prandoni; A Girolami; J S Ginsberg Journal: J Intern Med Date: 1998-01 Impact factor: 8.989