Early deep vein thrombosis: incidence in Asian stroke patients.
- Author:
Susanna S S TAN
1
;
N VENKETASUBRAMANIAN
;
Peck-Leong ONG
;
Tchoyoson C C LIM
Author Information
- Publication Type:Case Reports
- MeSH: Adult; Asian Continental Ancestry Group; Female; Hemiplegia; complications; Humans; Immobilization; Male; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Stroke; complications; Ultrasonics; Ultrasonography; Venous Thrombosis; diagnostic imaging; epidemiology
- From:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2007;36(10):815-820
- CountrySingapore
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
INTRODUCTIONDeep venous thrombosis (DVT) is thought to be less common in Asians than in the Caucasian population. The incidence of asymptomatic DVT in high-risk groups in the Asian population has not been well studied. While DVT incidence among Caucasian stroke patients has been extensively studied and the need for prophylaxis established, the lack of data in Asian patients leaves physicians with no firm basis for adopting prophylactic protocols in the local population. Our aim was to prospectively establish the incidence of early DVT in immobilised stroke patients in a heterogenous Asian population.
MATERIALS AND METHODSWe screened 44 patients with significant hemiplegia from acute stroke. Doppler ultrasound, the currently accepted method of investigation for DVT, was used to study patients on admission and at 1 week post-stroke. While there was no standard prophylactic regime in use, none of the patients received heparin and only 2 were given compression stockings.
RESULTSThe incidence of DVT at 1 week was 2.4%. Review at 1 month detected another patient with DVT, bringing the overall incidence at 1 month to 4.8%. This is lower than in Caucasian populations, but is similar to another local study on a different group of high-risk patients.
CONCLUSIONThe low incidence of early DVT in hospitalised stroke patients of Asian ethnicity does not justify routine screening for this population. Further research to validate this should ideally include a comparison test for DVT as ultrasound may have inherently lower sensitivity in an asymptomatic population.