Diana Gaitini1. 1. Unit of Ultrasound, Department of Medical Imaging, Rambam Medical Center and Faculty of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, P.O. Box 9602, Haifa 31096, Israel.
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to review the spectrum of image-based diagnostic tools used in the investigation of suspected deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Summary of the experience gained by the author as well as relevant publications, regarding vein imaging modalities taken from a computerized database, was reviewed. The imaging modalities reviewed include phlebography, color Doppler duplex ultrasonography (CDDUS), computerized tomography angiography (CTA) and venography (CTV), magnetic resonance venography (MRV), and radionuclide venography (RNV). CDDUS is recommended as the modality of choice for the diagnosis of DVT. A strategy combining clinical score and D-dimer test refines the selection of patients. Phlebography is reserved for discrepant noninvasive studies.
The purpose of this article is to review the spectrum of image-based diagnostic tools used in the investigation of suspected deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Summary of the experience gained by the author as well as relevant publications, regarding vein imaging modalities taken from a computerized database, was reviewed. The imaging modalities reviewed include phlebography, color Doppler duplex ultrasonography (CDDUS), computerized tomography angiography (CTA) and venography (CTV), magnetic resonance venography (MRV), and radionuclide venography (RNV). CDDUS is recommended as the modality of choice for the diagnosis of DVT. A strategy combining clinical score and D-dimer test refines the selection of patients. Phlebography is reserved for discrepant noninvasive studies.
Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) of the lower limb is a common and life-threatening condition. The incidence in the United States is estimated at 70–100 000 new cases/year with as many as 200 000 hospitalizations/year. It carries a risk of pulmonary embolism (PE) and the development of post-thrombotic syndrome. The
incidence of PE is calculated at 600 000 cases/year, 100 000 of them are fatal [1-3]. Risk factors for lower extremity acute venous occlusion range from, prolonged immobilization to
hypercoagulability syndromes, trauma, and malignancy. Venous
thromboembolism (VTE) is a leading cause of morbidity and
mortality during pregnancy and puerperium, and is second only to
hemorrhage as the commonest cause of maternal death during
pregnancy [4]. There is a fivefold increased risk of VTE in pregnant women compared with nonpregnant women of a similar age
[5].Malignancy and central venous lines are major risk factors of
upper extremity thrombosis (UEDVT) with predicted poor survival.
The increasing use of indwelling central venous catheters (CVC)
for transparietal feeding, fluid administration, and chemotherapy
has resulted in an increased prevalence of upper extremity venous
thrombosis, although, the rate of catheter-associated thrombosis
decreased in recent years thanks to improvement in
biocompatibility and better insertion and maintenance techniques
[6]. UEDVT may be asymptomatic or the clinical manifestations are not specific, presenting with arm or neck swelling
or pain. In more than half of the cases objective methods of
examination are negative for thrombosis. Pulmonary embolism
secondary to UEDVT, sometimes a lethal complication, is not
unusual and has been reported in a comparable prevalence to lower
extremity thrombosis. Other significant complications of UEDVT are
loss of vascular access, superior vena cava syndrome, and
postthrombotic venous insufficiency [7-9].The clinical complications (from postthrombotic syndrome to fatal
pulmonary embolism) as well the risk of anticoagulant treatment
require a precise diagnosis of DVT. The clinical diagnosis is
unreliable: only 20–30% of symptomatic patients have
proven DVT and 90% of fatal PE are asymptomatic for DVT
[10]. Objective methods of examination are demanded to reach an accurate diagnosis. Phlebography, computerized tomography
angiography followed by venography (CTA-CTV) and radionuclide
venography (RNV) are invasive or semi invasive tests. Color
Doppler duplex ultrasonography (CDDUS), and magnetic resonance
venography (MRV) are noninvasive methods. This paper highlights
the potential risks and benefits of each of these techniques and
presents the advantages, disadvantages, and accuracy of the
different imaging modalities. An appropriate imaging algorithm for
the diagnosis of DVT is presented. The use of clinical pretest
probability scoring and diagnostic algorithms can help identify
patients requiring further investigation for suspected venous
thromboembolism (VTE).
2. PHLEBOGRAPHY
Phlebography (also called venography, ascending contrast
phlebography, or contrast venography) is still considered the gold
standard in the diagnosis of peripheral DVT; it is the most
accurate test with a nearly 100% sensitivity and specificity
[11]. This X-ray examination provides an image of the limb veins after contrast material is injected into a distal vein
(Figures 1(a)–1(c)) [12]. Main
phlebographic findings are persistent filling defect, abrupt
interruption of contrast in a vein, lack of opacification in all
or some deep veins, and flow diversion with opacification of
collateral branches [13]. Venography relies on the anatomy of the venous system, lacking physiological information. It is
painful; expensive, exposes the patient to a fairly high dose of
radiation; and can cause complications related to nephrotoxicity
and allergic reactions to iodinated contrast agents. It also
carries a risk for post venographic phlebitis [14, 15]. In about 5% of cases, there are technical problems in conducting the test. Due to its invasive nature and the risk of
complications, it cannot be used neither as a routine test for the
diagnosis of symptomatic DVT nor as a screening tool in
asymptomatic patients at high risk for DVT. Peripheral
phlebography is performed when the noninvasive examination color
Doppler US and duplex Doppler is doubtful or technically limited,
such in suspected thrombosis of iliac vein, innominate vein, or
superior vena cava [13].
Figure 1
Normal phlebography. (a) Calf veins.
(b) Popliteal vein. (c) Femoral vein at the groin and iliac vein at the pelvis.
3. COLOR DOPPLER DUPLEX ULTRASONOGRAPHY
CDDUS is the initial test of choice for diagnosis of acute DVT due
to its high accuracy, relatively low cost, portability, widespread,
and lack of ionizing radiation [16]. B-mode ultrasound with Doppler color and duplex is the only noninvasive imaging test
that combines anatomy and physiology of the veins by visualization
of vein morphology and the map of flow velocity and direction. It
is required as the primary instrumentation for peripheral venous
testing according to the standards of the Intersocietal Commission
for the Accreditation of Vascular Laboratories (ICAVL) [17]. CDDUS for the diagnosis of limb vein thrombosis uses a combination
of gray-scale, compression, color, and spectral Doppler sonography.
Color and spectral Doppler analysis are useful in the diagnostic
evaluation of DVT but are best considered as adjuncts to the
conventional compression ultrasound examination. The examination
is performed by a high-resolution transducer of 7–10 MHz;
a lower frequency-4–8 MHz is required for the obesepatient, the edematous limb, and the pelvic veins. The veins
scanned comprise the deep venous system—femoral vein at the
groin and along the thigh, popliteal vein, and tibioperoneal trunk
at the upper calf—and the confluence of the superficial great
saphenous vein with the femoral vein. The deep calf veins are
usually examined when localized pain or swelling is
present. CDDUS findings of the normal vein are
sonolucent lumen, easily compressible with a slight pressure
exerted by the probe and centripetal nonpulsatile flow, with
respiratory phasicity and augmentation after Valsalva performance
(Figures 2(a)–2(c)). An echogenic lumen, depending on thrombus age, uncompressible and flow devoid is diagnostic of a thrombotic vein (Figures
3(a)–3(c)) [18-24]. The main aim of CDDUS is to confirm or exclude vein thrombosis.
Further information includes thrombus extent and
characterization—fresh or organized, free floating or attached,
and partial or totally occlusive—that have prognostic value for
the development of pulmonary embolism and post-thrombotic
syndrome. Patients with proximal DVT tend to present a slower and incomplete resolution of thrombus and to develop a more severe
post-thrombotic syndrome due to deep venous reflux [25]. Free floating thrombus carries an increased risk of pulmonary embolism,
although floating thrombus tends to attach to the vein wall or
resolve, not warranting any specific therapeutic procedure
[26]. Further diagnostic aims are to detect alternative disorders such as popliteal Baker's cyst, hematoma, aneurysm,
pseudoaneurysm, lymphadenopathy, or other tumors, known as
“pseudothrombophlebitis,” mimicking DVT. The incidence of these
alternative diagnoses is 11–18% [27]. A bilateral examination is indicated when high-risk patients are screened and
in the workflow of suspected PE in patients with risk factors for
DVT. Due to its high specificity, complete ultrasound examination
of the proximal and distal veins at least down to the level of the
popliteal trifurcation allows withholding anticoagulant therapy
without the risk of major complications. Isolated calf vein
thrombosis does not carry a significant adverse outcome; scanning
the calf with localized symptoms or physical findings is
cost-effective. A repeat examination is warranted if the clinical
findings worsen; otherwise, a single examination is enough
[28]. The sensitivity and specificity of USD for the
diagnosis of DVT in symptomatic patients is very high.
Compressibility under probe pressure (CUS) is the most accurate
test; for proximal DVT, femoral, and popliteal veins, compression
US reached a sensitivity of 97 to 100% and a specificity of
98 to 99%. For isolated calf DVT, the sensitivity dropped
to 50–70% and the specificity to 60%. An echogenic
lumen has a low sensitivity of about 50% for both proximal
and calf DVT, due to the low echogenicity of the fresh thrombus
[29-32]. In a meta-analysis of 100 cohort studies
that compared Duplex US to contrast venography in patients with
suspected DVT; the sensitivity for proximal DVT was 96.5%,
for distal calf DVT, 71.2% and specificity of 94.3%; the
sensitivity improved in the recent years probably due to equipment
development, US technique used, and operator expertise [33].
Figure 2
Normal vein. (a) Sonolucent lumen, easily compressible with a slight
pressure exerted by the probe. Left side: before compression;
right side: during compression; only the arteries remain visible.
Large arrow: common femoral vein (CFV); short arrow: great
saphenous vein. (b) Flow in femoral artery and veins at the level
of the bifurcation. (c) Centripetal nonpulsatile flow in femoral
vein, with respiratory phasicity.
Figure 3
Thrombotic vein. (a) Echogenic lumen, enlarged,
noncompressible vein. Left side: before compression; right side:
during pressure exerted by the probe, the vein does not collapse.
(b) Thrombus at the bifurcation of the femoral vein, seen as color
void and turbulent surrounding flow. (c) No flow demonstrated on
duplex in a thrombotic femoral vein.
Ultrasonography is the primary imaging modality also for the
diagnosis of upper-extremity thrombosis (UEDVT). The veins
examined include the deep system—internal jugular, subclavian,
axillary, and brachial veins. The superficial veins—cephalic and
basilica—are scanned in case of peripherally inserted
catheter-related suspected thrombosis. The fresh clot may be not
visualized and the diagnosis done on the presence of a vein
enlarged and rigid, without changes on respiratory phases or
respiratory maneuvers. Useful findings to rule-out thrombosis are
an echo-free compressible vein, normal response to respiratory
maneuvers-vein collapse on brief deep inspiration (sniff test), and
enlargement on Valsalva test normal color Doppler and biphasic
spectral display on duplex sonography [34-37]. The main
obstacle for the diagnosis of UEDVT is the presence of overlying
bones on the medial subclavian vein and centrally located veins,
innominate and superior vena cava, that makes them difficult to
visualize and impossible to directly assess by compression
techniques.Spectral Doppler abnormalities in the subclavian vein may be
predictable for central occlusions. Flow void on color Doppler and
a dampened nonpulsatile and nonphasic flow on duplex examination
are diagnostic for a central venous thrombosis [38]. A reversed flow in the jugular vein may indicate thrombosis in the
innominate vein with the internal jugular vein serving as a
collateral pathway. Patel et al. [34] related a 100% positive predictive value and 91% negative predictive value
for sonography in the diagnosis of complete central occlusions.
Small nonobstructive thrombus may remain undiagnosed and large
collateral veins misinterpreted as a normal vein, leading to false
negative results. To overcome some of the limitations of US
examination of the upper limb veins, a small footprint sector
transducer from a supraclavicular or suprasternal approach may be
of aid. CDDUS is a reliable method for diagnosing CVC-related
thrombosis of the upper limb veins especially if several
parameters are evaluated in combination [39]. High diagnostic accuracy of UEDVT was found in 6 prospective studies, with a
sensitivity of 78–100% and a specificity of
82–100% [8, 40–44]. False positive results were unusual. A sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of
94% for compression US and color Doppler US for UEDVT using
venography as the reference test ware reported by Prandoni et al.
[44].Chronic thrombosis in a patient with long-term catheterization is
more challenging, as enlargement of the thrombotic lumen is not
present. Color Doppler is even more useful in chronic thrombosis
detecting collateral veins and an echogenic, flow void, and small
caliber central vein. Large veins in an unusual anatomic position
and without the accompanying artery must be recognized as enlarged
collaterals and not be mistaken for the main vein. Aliasing due to
high velocities and high pulsatility in the stenosed areas in
comparison to dampened peripheral waveforms are additional
diagnostic parameters. Frozen valve leaflets and echogenic
synerchias may be seen as sequels of previous thrombosis
[35, 37, 45]. In any case, the diagnosis of catheter-associated
deep venous thrombosis may be difficult. Doppler ultrasound has a
lower accuracy in this setting than it does in lower extremity
venous thrombosis [46].A particular different issue is acute on chronic thrombosis. The
enlarged vein with hypoechoic lumen represents an acute process.
Recurrent thrombosis is a challenging diagnosis for all imaging
modalities. Comparison with a baseline examination may be helpful
in these cases.The clinical diagnosis of DVT is unreliable, but clinical
prediction rules based on signs and symptoms do facilitate the
categorization of patients into high, low, or medium risk
categories [47]. A diagnostic strategy combining clinical score, D-dimer test, and compression US may refine the selection of
patients. D-dimer assays have a high negative predictive value in
patients with suspected VTE and can exclude the diagnosis. Based
on clinical score and D-dimer test, venous US will be performed in
patients with a high clinical score, an elevated D-dimer, or both
(Figure 4).
Figure 4
Algorithm for the diagnosis of DVT in symptomatic
patients. By applying a diagnostic strategy based on the clinical
score and D-dimer test; venous USD is performed in patients with a
high clinical score, an elevated D-dimer, or both. The
appropriate examination is compression color duplex ultrasound of
the complete venous system, including the distal veins, when focal
symptoms or physical findings are present and bilateral
examination in the high-risk patient. Contrast venography is
reserved for a minority of cases. Modified from Mantoni M.
Ultrasound of limb veins. Eur Radio 11 : 1557-62, 2001 (with
author's permission).
Screening patients with plasma D-dimer and
ultrasonography of the lower limbs may be the most cost-effective
strategy. Ascending venography is reserved for patients with
negative or equivocal CDDUS results and a high clinical
probability of DVT [28, 48–50]. In the current state of the art, CDDUS is the modality of choice for the diagnosis of DVT. The
appropriate examination is compression color duplex ultrasound of
the complete venous system, including the distal veins when focal
symptoms or physical findings are present and a bilateral
examination in the high-risk patient. It is an accurate examination and allows an early and safe diagnosis of thrombosis without straining the patients. It is the main diagnostic tool in
symptomatic patients and in screening asymptomatic DVT in specific
high-risk populations. Pitfalls and limitations of venous
ultrasound are related to veins anatomy, flow changes, technical
limitations, and operator expertise.
4. COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY ANGIOGRAPHY
AND VENOGRAPHY
Multidetector CTA, combined with venous-phase imaging (CTA-CTV),
can accurately diagnose a pelvic vein or inferior vena cava
occlusion, sometimes the source of significant pulmonary emboli.
Multidectector helical CT (MDCT) of the chest (100–140 mL
of contrast medium injected at a rate of 3 mL/s) is
followed by venous-phase imaging CT of the lower limbs without any
additional contrast medium injection [51]. Indirect MDCT venography is acquired from the upper calves to the mid-abdomen.
Thrombosis appears as a hypodense mass sometimes encircled by the
hyperdense rim of contrast medium. The reported specificity and
sensitivity compared with ultrasound is variable [52]. Coche et al. [51] compared the results of CT venography for diagnosing DVT with those of Doppler sonography and phlebography
or repeated focalized sonography in case of discrepancy.
Sensitivity and specificity of CTV were 93% and 97%,
respectively (kappa = 0.88). CT venography in addition to
CT pulmonary angiography is a relatively accurate method for
evaluation of femoropopliteal venous thrombosis. In a comparative
study between CTA-CTV and sonography, Garg et al. [53] found a 100% sensitivity, 97% specificity, 100% negative
predictive value, and 71% positive predictive value for CTV.
Satisfactory or good quality CT venography examination was
obtained in 97% of the studies. Two CT venography studies had
false-positive findings due to flow artifacts. The authors
concluded that combined CT pulmonary angiography and CT venography
may be more efficacious than sonography or two separate
examinations in the selected patients. In another trial, CT venography
had 93% accuracy compared with sonography in identifying deep
venous thrombosis. However, the positive predictive value of CTV
was only 67%, suggesting that sonography should be used to
confirm the presence of isolated DVT before anticoagulation is
initiated. CT venography interpretation should be performed with
knowledge of certain pitfalls [54].The prospective investigation of pulmonary embolism diagnosis II
trial was conducted to investigate the accuracy of MDCTA alone and
combined with venous-phase imaging (CTA-CTV) for the diagnosis of
acute pulmonary embolism [55].MDCTA alone had 83% sensitivity, 96% specificity, and
positive predictive value with a concordantly high or low
probability on clinical assessment. CTA-CTV for PE had 90%
sensitivity and 95% specificity and was nondiagnostic with a
discordant clinical probability like MDCTA alone. Missing
diagnoses were due to poor image quality of either CTA or CTV.
According to this trial, MDCTA-CTV has a higher diagnostic
sensitivity than does CTA alone with similar specificity in
patients with suspected PE. The predictive value of both of them
is high with a concordant clinical assessment, but additional
testing is necessary when the clinical probability is inconsistent
with the imaging results. According to Cham et al. [56], a substantial number of patients suspected to have PE had DVT in the
absence of PE. The combined technique of pulmonary CTA-indirect
CTV has been shown to identify DVT in up to 18% of patients
with suspected PE who have no evidence of emboli on CTPA and thus
could have a significant effect on patient care. Indirect MDCT
venography is as accurate as sonography in the diagnosis of
femoropopliteal DVT and can further reveal thrombus in large
pelvis veins and the inferior vena cava, an important advantage
over sonographic screening for DVT [57], although the technique is slightly more time consuming (up to 4 min delay
after contrast injection) and has an increased radiation dose
[58].
5. MAGNETIC RESONANCE VENOGRAPHY
Two-dimensional time-of-flight venography (TOF-MRV) is the
technique of choice for magnetic resonance venography. Studies may
be performed without contrast and can depict emboli as filling
defects or directly detect the thrombus. MR direct thrombus
imaging (MR-DTI) is a novel technique which detects
metahemoglobin, allowing direct visualization of pulmonary emboli
and simultaneous imaging of the legs without the need for
intravenous contrast. This technique uses a T1-weighted
gradient-echo sequence, with a preexcitation radio-frequency
pulse to abolish fat signal, and an inversion recovery time chosen
to nullify signal from flowing blood to maximize thrombus
conspicuity. The technique is 98% sensitive and 96%
specific for diagnosing DVT when compared with ultrasound and
contrast venography. Early data suggest that MR-DTI is also highly
accurate in detection of PE and the safety of withholding
treatment on the basis of MR-DTI alone is currently being
evaluated [59]. Acute occlusion of the pelvic veins and the inferior vena cava, often due to extension from the
femoropopliteal system, represents a major risk for PE. Color flow
Doppler imaging is often limited for the diagnosis of iliocaval
thrombosis owing to obesity and bowel gas. Both CT scans and MR
imaging can accurately diagnose acute pelvic vein or inferior vena
cava occlusion and are as well helpful in diagnosing central chest
vein occlusion. MRI is preferred because it is noninvasive, does
not require contrast agent, carries no exposure to ionizing
radiation, that is definitively demanded for pregnant women, and
is highly accurate and reproducible [60].Furthermore, MRV can differentiate an acute occlusion from chronic
thrombus. In a study designed to evaluate the diagnostic value of
MRV and color Doppler US in the assessment of DVT compared with
contrast-enhanced venography, MRV was 100% sensitive and
100% specific in the diagnosis of DVT above the knee. Color
Doppler imaging depicted 13 of 15 cases of DVT and 5 of 6
venous examinations that had normal results, yielding sensitivity
and specificity of 87% and 83%, respectively. The
differences in sensitivity and specificity between MRV and color
Doppler US were not statistically significant [61]. In a recent meta-analysis to estimate the diagnostic accuracy of MRV
for DVT, the pooled estimate of sensitivity was 91.5%
(95% CI: 87.5–94.5%) and the pooled estimate of
specificity was 94.8% (95% CI: 92.6–96.5%).
Sensitivity for proximal DVT was higher than sensitivity for
distal DVT (93.9% versus 62.1%) [62]. MR venography seems to be more accurate than color Doppler sonography in
detecting the extension of deep venous thrombosis. Shankar et al.
[63] performed two-dimensional gated inflow and phase contrast MRV in children with suspected upper extremity
CVC-related thrombosis, to assess the extent of venous thrombosis
and to locate patent veins for replacement central venous
catheter. MRV was more accurate than Doppler ultrasonography and
contrast studies for defining the extent of venous thrombosis. MRV
correctly showed venous anatomy and patency for reinsertion of
CVC. MRV is considered medically indicated for evaluation of
venous thrombosis or occlusion in the large systemic veins (e.g.,
superior vena cava, subclavian, or other deep veins in the chest),
for differentiation of tumor thrombus and blood clot and diagnosis
of superior vena cava syndrome. The peer reviewed medical
literature has not established MRV to be superior to duplex
ultrasonography for diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis in the arms
or legs. MRV has not been shown to be superior to US for lower
limb DVT, except in imaging the deep femoral and hypogastric
vessels. However, information about these vessels is not needed
for management decisions, except in patients with pulmonary emboli
where the source of the emboli has not been identified by
ultrasonography [64]. MRV has the potential to be used as a stand-alone test for DVT but requires further evaluation.
Therefore it is considered to be experimental and investigational
for this application. Due to its high cost and limited
availability, MRV should be reserved to diagnose DVT in patients
for whom ultrasound examination is inappropriate or unfeasible
[62] and to replace venography and CTV in pregnant women and patients with contraindications to iodinated contrast media
injection.
6. NUCLEAR MEDICINE VENOGRAPHY
The radionuclide investigation of DVT includes such techniques as
radionuclide venography and thrombus-avid scintigraphy. Although
these methods have not been as thoroughly evaluated as compression
ultrasound, studies thus far have indicated encouraging results,
and further investigations are warranted [65]. Radionuclide venography of the upper extremity has been described as a reliable
noninvasive procedure for early diagnosis of upper limb venous
thrombosis associated with indwelling CVC. It is performed by
injecting both arms with approximately 5 mCi of technetium
pertechnetate followed by a normal saline flush. The dynamic
images are acquired on a large field of view camera with a high-energy
low-resolution collimator at the rate of two frames per
second [66, 67]. (99 m)TC-MAA radionuclide imaging is a
useful method for noninvasive detection of DVT and PTE. Combined
radionuclide venography and perfusion lung scan can also be
performed in the same setting if Tc99m-MAA is used
[68]. The radionuclide venogram appears accurate in the proximal veins and in excluding but not diagnosing distal venous
thrombosis. The potential advantages of radionuclide venography
versus contrast venography are low-volume and low-flow injection,
no need to access a large peripheral vein, no adverse side
effects, low radiation exposure (130 mrads), rapidity of
execution, and no patient preparation. The disadvantage is the low
anatomic detail [66, 67].In summary, invasive testing for venous thromboembolism can be
safely avoided in the majority of patients, using diagnostic
strategies combining noninvasive tests.Color and duplex ultrasound with manual compression (CDDUS) is the
most sensitive and specific noninvasive test and is nowadays
accepted as the modality of choice for the diagnosis of DVT. CT
venous-phase imaging at the time of CT pulmonary angiography and
MR venography is comparable with venous ultrasonography in the
evaluation of femoropopliteal DVT. The iliac veins and vena cava,
vessels poorly shown on ultrasonography but sometimes the source
of significant pulmonary emboli, are also depicted by CT and MR
venography. MRV can differentiate an acute occlusion from chronic
thrombus. Due to its high cost and limited availability, MRV is
not used for the routine diagnosis of DVT and should be reserved
for the examination of inaccessible veins on ultrasonography and
as a complementary test in nondiagnostic ultrasound studies for
pregnant women and patients with contraindications to iodinated
contrast media injection. Studies on venous scintigraphy have
indicated encouraging results but further investigations are
warranted. A diagnostic strategy combining clinical score, D-dimer
test, and compression US can be used in a systematic way to
reliably rule in or exclude venous thromboembolism.
7. CONCLUSIONS
Due to its high specificity, a negative examination may preclude
anticoagulant treatment. A strategy combining
clinical score and D-dimer test refines the selection of patients.
Phlebography is the gold standard method but is invasive and
carries risks of contrast media complications and ionizing
radiation. CTV following pulmonary CTA and MRV is useful to detect
iliocaval thrombosis. MRV can differentiate acute from chronic
thrombosis and diagnose central obstructions. RNV has low-anatomic
detail.CDDUS is the modality of choice for the diagnosis of DVT. A
diagnostic strategy combining clinical score, D-dimer test, and CDDUS is recommended. Phlebography is reserved for discrepant noninvasive studies.
Authors: A Cogo; A W Lensing; M M Koopman; F Piovella; S Siragusa; P S Wells; S Villalta; H R Büller; A G Turpie; P Prandoni Journal: BMJ Date: 1998-01-03
Authors: A W Lensing; P Prandoni; D Brandjes; P M Huisman; M Vigo; G Tomasella; J Krekt; J Wouter Ten Cate; M V Huisman; H R Büller Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 1989-02-09 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Carsten W K P Arnoldussen; Yeelai Lam; Nobutake Ito; Bjorn Winkens; M Eline Kooi; Cees H A Wittens; Joachim E Wildberger Journal: Eur Radiol Date: 2017-07-03 Impact factor: 5.315