The efficacy of low-dose subcutaneous heparin (5000 IU eight-hourly) is being studied in a single-centre, prospective randomised trial of patients aged over 40 submitted to major elective intra-abdominal surgery. The trial end-points are the objectively defined incidence and extent of deep vein thrombosis (as seen on uptake of 125I-labelled fibrinogen, Doppler ultrasonography, and bilateral ascending phlebography) and non-fatal pulmonary embolus (as measured by preoperative spirometry and preoperative and postoperative chest radiography and perfusion lung scanning performed on a routine, unselected basis). An interim analysis of the first 200 patients indicates that low-dose heparin significantly reduces the incidence of calf-vein thrombosis but does not reduce the incidence of proximal segment thrombosis or non-fatal pulmonary embolism. Thus the routine use of low-dose heparin prophylaxis in all major surgical procedures in patients aged over 40 may not be advisable. © 1979, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Immelman, E. J., Jeffery, P., Benatar, S. R., Elliot, M. S., Smith, J. A., Funston, M. R., … Louw, J. H. (1979). Failure of low-dose heparin to prevent significant thromboembolic complications in high-risk surgical patients: Interim report of prospective trial. British Medical Journal, 1(6176), 1447–1450. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.6176.1447
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