Venous Thromboembolism
This chapter presents the current practices for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism (venous thromboembolism or VTE). The major focus is on prevention, because VTE is considered the leading cause of preventable deaths in hospitalized patients (1).
I. Risk Factors
A. Major Surgery
B. Major Trauma
Victims of major trauma have a greater than 50% chance of developing VTE, and pulmonary embolism is the third leading cause of death in those who survive the first day (3). Contributing factors in trauma-related VTE are vascular injury and thromboplastin release from damaged tissues (similar to surgery-related VTE).
C. Acute Medical Illness
Hospitalization for acute medical illness is associated with an 8-fold increase in the risk of VTE (5).
Conditions with the highest risk of VTE include acute stroke, neuromuscular weakness syndromes, severe sepsis, cancer, and right-sided heart failure.
D. ICU-Related Risks
ICU-related risk factors for VTE include prolonged mechanical ventilation (>48 hrs), central venous cath-eters, vasopressor infusions, drug-induced paralysis, and prolonged immobility.
ICU patients often have one of the high-risk conditions mentioned previously, in addition to the ICU-related risk factors for VTE; as a result, all ICU patients are considered to have a high risk of VTE (3), and are therefore candidates for thromboprophylaxis (see next).
II. Thromboprophylaxis
Prophylaxis for VTE is a standard measure for all ICU patients (except those that are fully anticoagulated), and is started on the day of admission. Appropriate preventive measures can vary in different high-risk conditions, as indicated in Table 4.1.
Table 4.1 Thromboprophylaxis for Selected Conditions | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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A. Unfractionated Heparin
Standard or unfractionated heparin is a heterogeneous mix of mucopolysaccharide molecules that vary in size and anticoagulant activity.
1. Actions
Heparin is an indirect-acting drug that must bind to a cofactor (antithrombin III or AT) to produce an anticoagulant
effect. The heparin-AT complex inactivates several coagulation factors, and inactivation of factor IIa (antithrombin effect) is 10 times more sensitive than the other anticoagulant reactions (6).
Heparin also binds to a specific protein on platelets to form an antigenic complex that induces the formation of IgG antibodies. These antibodies can cross-react with the platelet binding site and activate platelets, which promotes thrombosis and a consumptive thrombocytopenia. This is the mechanism for heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, which is described in more detail in Chapter 12.
2. Prophylactic Dosing
The potent antithrombin activity of the heparin-AT complex allows low doses of heparin to inhibit thrombogenesis without producing systemic anticoagulation.
The standard regimen of low-dose unfractionated heparin (LDUH) is 5000 units by subcutaneous injection every 12 hours. There is a more frequent dosing regimen (5000 units every 8 hours), but there is no evidence of superiority over twice daily dosing (2,7).
Studies in ICU patients (8) and postoperative patients (9) have shown a 50–60% reduction in the incidence of leg vein thrombosis with LDUH.
3. Complications
4. Indications
LDUH is suitable for thromboprophylaxis in all high-risk conditions except hip and knee surgery (see Table 4.1) (3).
Table 4.2 Anticoagulant Regimens for Thromboprophylaxis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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B. Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin
Low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) is produced by enzymatic cleavage of heparin molecules, which produces smaller molecules of more uniform size. This results in more potent and predictable anticoagulation than occurs with unfractionated heparin. LMWH must still bind to anti-thrombin III, and the major anticoagulant reaction is inactivation of Factor Xa.
1. Advantages
LMWH has the following advantages over unfraction-ated heparin:
2. Disadvantages
The major disadvantage of LMWH is its clearance by the kidneys, which creates the need for dosage adjustments in patients with renal failure. However, the tendency to accumulate in renal failure varies with individual LMWH preparations (see later).
3. Relative Efficacy
LMWH is equivalent to LDUH for all high-risk conditions encountered in the ICU (11), and is superior to LDUH for prophylaxis of VTE in hip and knee surgery (3,4).