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Mechanical Devices

An option to complement anticoagulant therapy

While mechanical prophylaxis methods have been shown to reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), they have been studied much less intensively than the major pharmacologic treatment options.3
Mechanical methods of prophylaxis include graduated compression stockings and various intermittent compression devices. All increase venous outflow or reduce stasis within the leg veins. Recent guidelines recommend that mechanical methods of prophylaxis should be used primarily in patients who are at high risk of bleeding, or as an adjunct to anticoagulant therapy.3

Graduated compression stockings

Graduated compression stockings (GCS) provide circumferential pressure that gradually decreases from the ankle to the thigh. This increased pressure promotes venous blood flow.111
Clinical trials on the use of GCS for DVT prevention have produced variable results.56, 112, 113 A recent study comparing fondaparinux plus GCS to fondaparinux alone for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis after hip surgery (N=874) found that the combined treatment conferred no additional protective benefits over fondaparinux alone.114 For abdominal surgery, however, studies have shown a synergistic effect of GCS used in combination with pharmacologic prophylaxis.115
Contraindications to the use of GCS include peripheral arterial disease, severe leg oedema, peripheral neuropathy, a skin graft, and dermatitis involving the legs.111

Intermittent pneumatic compression

Intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC) uses leggings inflated by a pneumatic pump. The leggings are repeatedly inflated, and then deflated, with the goal of increasing venous return. This action mimics the natural calf muscle contractions that promote venous return in active people.111
In an analysis that combined results from 19 trials involving 2255 patients, Roderick and colleagues reported that IPC reduced the incidence of DVT by 66% compared to controls. There was no significant difference in efficacy from single-chamber as opposed to sequential compression devices.112

Venous foot pump

Venous foot pumps (VFPs) imitate the physiologic pumping action of weight-bearing on the venous plexus of the sole of the foot. In immobilised patients, this action simulates the effect of normal walking to increase venous flow from the leg.
Research on the efficacy of foot pumps is limited and inconsistent — further studies are needed to define an appropriate role for this device.56, 60, 111, 116, 117


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Prophylaxis
The prevention of a disease or pathological condition.
Fondaparinux
An indirect Factor Xa inhibitor comprising a synthetic pentasaccharide sequence matching the part of the heparin molecule that binds to antithrombin. It is administered by subcutaneous injection.
Venous thromboembolism
A condition in which a blood clot (thrombus) forms in a vein, which in some cases then breaks free and enters the circulation as an embolus, finally lodging in and completely obstructing a blood vessel, e.g., in lungs causing a PE. The term encompasses both DVT and PE.
Oedema
The presence of abnormally large amounts of fluid in the intercellular tissue spaces of the body, usually used to describe demonstrable accumulation of excessive fluid in subcutaneous tissues.
Intermittent pneumatic compression
A mechanical method of preventing DVT in the legs. IPC machines use air bladders that are wrapped around the thigh and/or calf. These alternately inflate and deflate, squeezing the muscles and increasing blood flow.

From the Image Library

Vein image 1: venous thrombus formation in cusps of veins Patient figure: major veins and deep vein thrombosis (DVT) Venogram Showing Deep Venous Thrombosis See all Venous Thrombosis

Did You Know?

About one in eight patients will die as a result of a venous blood clot that develops while in the hospital.3, 40

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