Blood clot which forms in a vein
Aetiology
Thrombosis is considered to arise from the interplay between the three factors that make up Virchow’s triad:
Hypercoagulable state
- Malignancy
- Pregnancy and peripartum
- Oestrogen therapy
- IBD
- Sepsis
- Thrombophilia
Endothelial injury
- Venous disorders
- Venous valvular damage (e.g. from previous DVT/PE - very strong RF)
- Trauma or surgery
- Indwelling catheters
Circulatory stasis
- Left ventricular dysfunction
- Immobility or paralysis
- Venous insufficiency/varicose veins
- Venous obstruction - tumour, obesity, pregnancy
Pathophysiology
- Low pressure system, platelets not activated → activates coagulation cascade → clot rich in fibrin
Formation of DVTs
- DVTs form predominantly in the venous valve pockets and other sites of assumed stasis
- Distal vein thrombosis: refers to DVT of the calves
- Proximal vein thrombosis: DVT of the popliteal or femoral vein, more likely to embolise
Pulmonary embolism
- Usually the result of a DVT (95%)
- Can also be caused by embolism of a blood clot from the atria in a patient with AF - ARTERIAL THROMBOSIS NOT VENOUS
Clinical presentation
Deep vein thrombosis
- Limb feels hot, swollen, tender, erythema (unilateral)
- Pitting oedema
- Mild fever

Pulmonay emobolism
- Dyspnoea - often acute onset
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Symptoms of DVT - leg pain, swelling etc.
- Collapse (/sudden death)
- Fever
- Haemoptysis
- Tachycardia
- Hypoxia
- Cyanosis
- Low BP
Investigations
DVT
- D-dimer - rule out test for patients considered unlikely to have a DVT based on the Wells score
- US Doppler leg scan is diagnostic - indicated if patient has raised D-dimers, or if they have a high Wells score (in which case US would be first line)
PE
- If Wells score indicates a PE is likely - perform a CTPA
- If Wells score indicates a PE is unlikely - perform D-dimer and if positive perform a CTPA
- A V/Q scan is an alternative to a CTPA used in patients with renal impairment, contrast allergy or at risk from radiation where a CTPA is unsuitable
- Try to avoid using CTPA for pregnant women (use USS or V/Q), however if patient is very unwell CTPA is the best modality so accept risk of radiation
- Other imaging:
- CXR - will be normal early on in PE (before infarction), often used to rule out other causes, ‘wedge-shaped infarct’ indicates PE
- USS leg - if radiation to be avoided or DVT suspected
- Other tests:
- ECG - sinus tachycardia, S1Q3T3 (right heart strain pattern)
- Troponin - may be raised due to strain on right ventricle, raised troponin is associated with worse outcomes
- ABG - type I resp failure, respiratory alkalosis
- Investigate underlying cause - USS, cancer screen, autoantibodies (SLE), thrombophilia screen
Management
Acute management
- The initial management for a suspected or confirmed DVT or PE is with anticoagulation
- Apixaban or rivaroxaban (DOACs) first line in the majority of patients
- May be outpatient if patient considered low-risk
- If neither apixaban or rivaroxaban are suitable then either LMWH followed by dabigatran or edoxaban OR LMWH followed by a vitamin K antagonist (VKA, i.e. warfarin)
- Thrombolysis is recommended as the first-line treatment for massive PE where there is circulatory failure (e.g. hypotension)
Secondary prevention
- The options for long term anticoagulation are warfarin, a DOAC or LMWH
- Warfarin first line in antiphospholipid syndrome
- LMWH first line in pregnancy
- Treatment with a should be continued for at least three months
- Provoked DVT with reversible factors - 3 months
- Provoked DVT with irreversible factors, or unprovoked DVT - 3-6 months, potentially life-long depending on patient factors (e.g. genetic clotting disorder)