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. 1994 Jun 1;74(5):487-93.
doi: 10.1016/0049-3848(94)90269-0.

D-dimer plasma measurement in patients undergoing major hip surgery: use in the prediction and diagnosis of postoperative proximal vein thrombosis

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D-dimer plasma measurement in patients undergoing major hip surgery: use in the prediction and diagnosis of postoperative proximal vein thrombosis

O Bongard et al. Thromb Res. .

Abstract

Plasma D-Dimer (DD), a highly sensitive marker of venous thromboembolism, was measured with an ELISA assay preoperatively and on the 12th postoperative day in 173 patients undergoing major hip surgery (78 elective arthroplasties and 95 operations for fractures). Proximal deep venous thrombosis (DVT) was detected by systematic compression venous ultrasonography on the 12th postoperative day in 12 (7%) patients. In one additional case, proximal DVT was diagnosed by venography. Preoperative DD level was significantly higher in patients with fracture than in patients undergoing elective arthroplasty. At a cutoff of 500 micrograms/L as determined by ROC curve analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the pre-operative DD concentration for the development of subsequent proximal DVT were 93%, 23%, 36% and 96%, respectively. The diagnostic exclusion value of the DD measurement on the 12th postoperative day was similar but for a cutoff of 2000 micrograms/L. These data suggest that plasma DD measurement might be useful to predict and diagnose proximal DVT following major hip surgery.

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