Your browser does not allow JavaScript!
JavaScript is necessary for the proper functioning of this website. Please enable JavaScript or use a modern browser.
Open Science Slovenia
Open Science
DiKUL
slv
|
eng
Search
Browse
New in RUL
About RUL
In numbers
Help
Sign in
Risk of venous thromboembolism during rehabilitation of patients with spinal cord injury
ID
Eichinger, Sabine
(
Author
),
ID
Eischer, Lisbeth
(
Author
),
ID
Šinkovec, Hana
(
Author
),
ID
Wittgruber, Gabriela
(
Author
),
ID
Traby, Ludwig
(
Author
),
ID
Kammer, Michael
(
Author
),
ID
Kyrle, Paul A.
(
Author
),
ID
Steinbrecher, Oskar
(
Author
),
ID
Kaloud, Herbert
(
Author
),
ID
Kyrle, Victoria
(
Author
),
ID
Moser, Hartwig
(
Author
),
ID
Wildburger, Renate
(
Author
)
PDF - Presentation file,
Download
(658,35 KB)
MD5: B5F72BA2849E58B540458D2322067DE6
URL - Source URL, Visit
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0193735
Image galllery
Abstract
Background: Patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) are at risk of thrombosis and bleeding. Data on the risks during rehabilitation are inconsistent, and thromboprophylactic strategies are heterogeneous. We aimed to evaluate the thrombotic risk and bleeding events of SCI patients during rehabilitation. Methods: We retrospectively collected hospital record data of 263 consecutive SCI patients admitted at a rehabilitation clinic. 78 patients with acute venous thromboembolism (VTE) at the primary center, without acute trauma or lower extremity paresis, less than one month rehabilitation, or reasons for long-term therapeutic anticoagulation, were excluded. All patients received pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis throughout rehabilitation. Primary endpoint was objectively diagnosed VTE; secondary endpoint was bleeding. Results: Of 185 patients, 162 (88%) were men; mean age was 47.8 years. 94 patients were tetraplegic, 91 paraplegic. During a mean (±SD) time of 5.1±2.1 months, VTE was diagnosed in 8 patients. After excluding five patients with VTE detected within 2 days after admission, the probability of developing VTE after 6 months of rehabilitation was 2% (95% CI 0–4.4%). Only high D-Dimer upon admission was associated with risk of VTE (adjusted HR 2.3, 95% CI 1.4–4.1). Of 24 bleedings, 14 (64%) occurred at the heparin injection site. Two patients had major bleeding and five had clinically relevant non major bleeding. Conclusion: SCI patients are at risk of VTE and bleeding during rehabilitation. Strategies need to be developed to identify these patients in order to initiate adequate anticoagulation. Direct oral anticoagulants, which have a favourable risk-benefit profile and are convenient, should be explored.
Language:
English
Keywords:
venous thromboembolism
,
spinal cord injury
,
rehabilitation medicine
,
thrombosis
Work type:
Article
Typology:
1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:
BF - Biotechnical Faculty
Publication status:
Published
Publication version:
Version of Record
Year:
2018
Number of pages:
10 str.
Numbering:
Vol. 13, no. 3
PID:
20.500.12556/RUL-153143
UDC:
61
ISSN on article:
1932-6203
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0193735
COBISS.SI-ID:
178054915
Publication date in RUL:
19.12.2023
Views:
681
Downloads:
36
Metadata:
Cite this work
Plain text
BibTeX
EndNote XML
EndNote/Refer
RIS
ABNT
ACM Ref
AMA
APA
Chicago 17th Author-Date
Harvard
IEEE
ISO 690
MLA
Vancouver
:
Copy citation
Share:
Record is a part of a journal
Title:
PloS one
Publisher:
PLOS
ISSN:
1932-6203
COBISS.SI-ID:
2005896
Similar documents
Similar works from RUL:
Similar works from other Slovenian collections:
Back