【學術】Deep Vein Thrombosis 和 Pulmonary Embolism 抗凝血劑的使用 Guideline
Deep Vein thrombosis VS Pulmonary embolism
- Severe symptoms:
- Treat with anticoagulants.
- Length of treatment: 3 months (no matter whether DVT was associated with a transient risk factor (surgery, hospitalization, estrogen therapy, etc.) or was unprovoked (= idiopathic).
- No, mild or moderate symptoms:
- No anticoagulation needed.
- If DVT has extended: treat with anticoagulants for 3 months.
- If extension of clot has not occurred within the first 2 weeks, it is unlikely to occur subsequently.
- Risk factors for extension:
- Positive D-dimer,
- DVT that is extensive or close to the proximal veins,
- No reversible provoking factor for DVT present,
- Active cancer,
- Previous history of blood clots, and inpatient status.
- Should be treated with anticoagulants.
- Not to use thrombolytics or clot removal interventions (thrombectomy) routinely.
- Treatment
- In the first few days:
- Use once daily Dalteparin (Fragmin) or Tinzaparin (Innohep) or Fondaparinux (Arixtra) or twice daily Enoxaparin (Lovenox).
- Beyond the first few days:
- warfarin, rather than Dabigatran (PradaxaÒ) or Rivaroxaban (XareltoÒ).
- Length of treatment with blood thinners:
- DVT triggered by surgery:
- 3 months, rather than 6 or 12 months.
- DVT due to a mild risk factor (i.e. non-surgical risk factors such as estrogen therapy, long-distance travel, non-surgical hospital stay, etc):
- 3 months, rather than 6 or 12 months or long-term.
- Unprovoked (idiopathic) DVT:
- long-term, if risk for bleeding not very high. Re-evaluation every so often (once per year?) to determine whether long-term treatment is still the right thing to do.
- Incidentally discovered (asymptomatic) DVT or PE
- Leg, pelvic or IVC DVT:
- Treat with blood thinners. Length: same as discussed in proximal and distal DVT section (discussed above).
- Abdominal DVT (portal, splenic, mesenteric or hepatic vein thrombosis):
- Do not treat with blood thinners.
- PE:
- Treat with anticoagulants. Length: same as discussed in the PE section below.
- Should be treated with anticoagulants.
- tPA for 2 hours into a peripheral vein while
- PE is massive (i.e. combination of low blood pressure below 90 mm Hg systolic, heart rate above 100/min, poor perfusion of inner organs, low blood oxygen level, abnormal serum cardiac enzymes, abnormal right heart function on echo or CT)
- The patient is at low risk for bleeding
- The first few days:
- Use once daily Dalteparin (Fragmin) or Tinzaparin (Innohep) or Fondaparinux (Arixtra) or twice daily Enoxaparin (Lovenox).
- Beyond the first few days:
- warfarin, rather than Dabigatran (PradaxaÒ) or Rivaroxaban (XareltoÒ).
- Length of treatment with blood thinners (same treatment decision principles as in DVT):
- PE triggered by surgery:
- 3 months, rather than 6 or 12 months.
- PE due to a mild risk factor (i.e. non-surgical risk factors such as estrogen therapy, long-distance travel, non-surgical hospital stay, etc):
- 3 months, rather than 6 or 12 months or long-term.
- Unprovoked (idiopathic) PE:
- Long-term, if risk for bleeding not very high. Re-evaluation every so often (once per year?) to determine whether long-term treatment is still the right thing to do.
Cancer associated DVT or PE
- Treat for at least 3 months and preferably long-term, unless bleeding risk very high.
- Low molecular weight heparin is the preferred treatment, rather than warfarin.
Arm DVT
- In upper extremity DVT not associated with a central venous catheter:
- 3 months of anticoagulation is recommended.
- In upper extremity DVT associated with a central venous catheter:
- Anticoagulation should be given as long as the catheter is in place.
- If the catheter is removed, anticoagulation should continue for 3 months
- Superficial thrombophlebitis
- In patients with superficial thrombophlebitis of the leg of at least 5 cm in length:
- The suggestion is to give prophylactic dose of fondaparinux (preferred) or LMWH for 45 days, rather than no anticoagulation.
- Vena cava filter (=IVC filter)
- Should only be placed in the patient with an acute DVT who cannot tolerate blood thinners because of active bleeding or a high risk for bleeding.
- Wear for at least 2 years (to prevent or minimize the occurrence of postthrombotic syndrome.
- If at 2 years the patient has bothersome symptoms of postthrombotic syndrome (swelling, pain), continue to wear stockings for symptoms relief.
- Wear for at least 2 years (to prevent or minimize the occurrence of postthrombotic syndrome.
- If at 2 years the patient has bothersome symptoms of postthrombotic syndrome (swelling, pain), continue to wear stockings for symptoms relief.
以上由ACCP提供
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