August 27, 2010

Upper Extremity Deep Vein Thrombosis

An ultrasound image shows an echogenic thrombus and absence of color flow in the right axillary veins (arrows).

Facts: Upper Extremity Deep Vein Thrombosis
  • Secondary form (more common) is believed to be due to intimal injury, venous stasis and hypercoagulability. Primary form (Paget-von Schrotter syndrome) occurs in young adults due to underlying chronic venous compressive abnormality caused by musculoskeletal structures in the costoclavicular space
  • Axillosubclavian vein most common location because it is relatively fixed in the thoracic outlet, therefore it is exposed to repeated trauma with arm movement
  • Etiology: central venous catheter (CVC), permanent cardiac pacer, mediastinal tumors, radiation, surgery, hypercoagulable states
  • Increasingly common. 8% of all DVTs
  • Complications: pulmonary embolism, SVC syndrome, postthrombotic venous insufficiency, loss of vascular access
  • The most powerful independent predictor of UEDVT = presence of CVC (increases the risk by 7 folds)
  • Other risk factors in patients without CVC: young age, lean body weight and inpatient status
Imaging
  • US is the imaging modality of choice
  • US shows lack of compressibility, absence of color flow signal and augmentation, visualization of thrombus
  • Radiography may show cervical rib, fractured rib or clavicle

References:

1. Joffe HV, Kucher N, Tapson VF, et al. Upper-extremity deep vein thrombosis: a prospective registry of 592 patients. Circulation 2004;110:1605-1611.

2. Greben C and Charles HW. Deep vein thrombosis, upper extremity. In eMedicine, updated Jul 28, 2009.

1 comment: