Severe hyperhomocysteinemia due to inborn errors of methionine metabolism results in precocious development of arteriosclerosis and predisposition to venous and arterial thromboembolism. Although the findings of several studies have indicated that mild hyperhomocysteinemia is common in occlusive arterial disease, no similar studies have been made on venous thromboembolism. In this study of subjects under 50 years of age, we found no significant differences in the plasma homocysteine concentrations, either in the fasting state or after methionine loading, between 42 patients with venous thromboembolism and 42 healthy controls. Nonetheless, male patients manifested a tendency toward higher homocysteine concentrations than male controls; 6 patients (14%) versus 2 controls (5%) responded abnormally to methionine loading which might indicate heterozygosity for cystathionine synthase deficiency. Thus, further studies on plasma homocysteine in venous thromboembolism are warranted.
Objective: To investigate the relation between initial symptoms and long-term sequelae in first-time deep venous thrombosis (DVT). Design: Follow-up study of patients 6 years after an episode of suspected symptomatic DVT. Setting: Vascular laboratory, University Hospital of Lund. Patients: 66 patients, 19 with femoral DVT, 20 with calf DVT and 27 with normal phlebograms at initial investigation. Main outcome measures: Symptoms and signs of chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), foot volumetry and measurement of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) activity. Initial clinical signs and results at phlebography were compared with findings at follow-up. Results: Of patients with DVT, 11 (28%) had been treated for a recurrent DVT during follow-up. No relation was found between initial signs of DVT and late signs of CVI. Patients with DVT had significantly more signs of CVI but symptoms did not differ between the groups. Mean levels of PAI-1 activity were similar in the three groups, and patients with recurrent DVT did not differ. Refilling flow was related to the clinical CVI-score, and expelled volume was inversely related to the extension of DVT at phlebography. Conclusion: The recurrence rate is high in first-time DVT, but symptoms are mostly mild as long as after 6 years. There is a poor correlation between symptoms of CVI and objective findings. The late development of CVI cannot be predicted from the clinical signs in the acute phase. Levels of PAI-1 do not correlate with the degree of CVI.
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