5 scanning for dvt

Post on 07-May-2015

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Scanning for DVT

Transcript of 5 scanning for dvt

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DVT ultrasoundSAH & RNSH 2011

Critical Care Ultrasound CourseThanks to Cindy Lucas… and yet again to

Daniel Lichtenstein

DVT! Anatomy ! Below knee DVT?! Compression US:

! Technique! Sites

! What the scan can tell you! Pitfalls

Anatomy of the deep veins

Anatomy of the deep veins

Below the knee!Anterior tibial!Posterior tibial!Peroneal!Gastrocnemial!Soleal

!Variable !Paired !Tricky!!Relevance of DVT?

Above the knee! Popliteal Vein in popliteal

fossa! From confluence of 3 calf

veins! To adductor canal! (Superficial) Femoral! Profunda Femoris joins

4cm below inguinal ligament

! Common Femoral! Long/ great saphenous

Here’s the problem

It would be nice to scan the below knee veins

!Incr sensitivity!Incr accuracy

!Variable !Paired !Tricky!!Relevance of DVT?

But it’s hard!! Variable! Paired! Tiny! Tricky! And most of them don’t

ermbolize! (But some do…)

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Previous top tip: just look for above knee

Leave the calves to the sonographers!

But Lichtenstein came up with a solution

! Except for the anterior tibials, the below knee veins travel all in a line, a couple cm below the interosseous membrane

! together with their arteries: 2 veins for each artery = 6 vessels, all lined up

! We can see them from the front of the leg!! Probe between the tibia & fibula

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Now we have 2 options

1. Just above knee: leave the calves to the sonographers!

2. Below knee (anterior approach)

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DVT scan:Technique

Probe & preset?

! Ideally linear probe / vein preset! But curved probe / FAST preset works

too! Don’t need Doppler

Compression US

! Probe in transverse position! Just squash the vein!! If it squashes easily & completely, there

is no DVT! If it doesn’t, there’s a DVT

Normal veins ! Completely compressible! Press hard enough to just indent the

artery

Features of DVT! Gold standard sign: vein not completely

compressible! You might see thrombus! Vein might fail to augment on Doppler

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Test

DVT?

DVT?

DVT?

DVT?

DVT?

DVT?

DVT?

Compression US! Pros ! Easy! Rapid ! B mode only! 98% sensitive

Cons! Misses external iliac

DVT! Misses small non-

occlusive DVT

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Which sites can I compress?

Which sites can I compress?

! Internal Jugular V! Subclavian V! IVC! Saphenofemoral confluence (up fem)! Lower (superf) femoral near adductor hiatus! Long saphenous V! Short saphenous V! Popliteal vein & trifurcation! Beloe knee veins

Which sites should I compress?

! Up to you! The more veins you scan, the more sensitive

you are… eg UL veins add 4% in PE! The fewer you scan, the less irritating it is! 3-point scan is reasonable

1. Upper femoral (confluence)2. Lower femoral (near adductor hiatus)3. Popliteal (irritating if supine) …or …below knee

(weird at first)

1: Groin

! Probe in transverse position! Start just below inguinal ligament! ‘Mickey Mouse’ sign

! Femoral A! Saphenofemoral confluence! Then compress

2: insertion of LSV / GSV

2: insertion of LSV / GSV

3: fem V just above knee

! Adductor hiatus! Medial to the bone ! Hand behind, presses forward

4: popliteal fossa

! Lie patient on side, or lift leg! Popliteal vein

! Superficial to popliteal artery! visualise bone beneath! follow it to the trifurcation

5: below the knee

! Supine patient! Probe transverse! Between tibia & fibula

Handy Hints as you go down the leg

1. Decrease greyscale (dynamic range)2. Decrease frequency3. Increase depth as you go4. Obese: change to curved probe5. Sit with legs over bed / stand up6. Valsalva (humming works)7. Doppler …

Pitfalls

! Duplicate venous systems (duplex popliteal up to 35%)

! Non occlusive thrombus! LSV, SSV! Ant tibial veins! However … ‘90% = 100%’

One more time: Handy Hints ! You don’t need Doppler! You don’t need linear probe! But you won’t be 100%! Below-knee isn’t that hard! Sitting up / standing! Valsalva (humming works)

DVT US: Summary

! Compression US! Groin ! Just above knee! Below knee