Thrombosis poses a significant problem in microvascular surgery, despite antithrombotic therapy. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether a topical application of unfractionated heparin is equally efficient as a systemic bolus in avoiding thrombosis. A rat femoral artery model was used. Three different doses of systemic heparin (50, 100, and 200 U/kg) and one dose of locally administered heparin (100 U/ml) were evaluated and compared to a control group receiving isotonic saline. A thrombogenic injury, simulating poor microsurgical technique, was applied to the artery. The thrombus area was visualized by transillumination, and recorded for 60 min on video, for subsequent measurement. In addition, the level of activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and of anti-activated clotting factor X (aXa) was determined. Local heparin significantly reduced thrombus size as compared to isotonic saline and systemic heparin (50 and 100 U/kg). High-dose systemic heparin (200 U/kg) was equally potent, but local heparin had significantly less influence on the hemostatic parameters.
In this study, simulated "poor" repairs applied to transverse incisions in the iliac arteries of 40 rats were the basis for comparing the effect of variations in blood flow on thromboembolism. Using vital microscopy and digital image processing, we performed 2 experiments. In the first experiment (n = 20), the reduction of post-repair blood flow by approximately 50% resulted in an 83% reduction in the total number of emboli appearing in the microcirculation of the cremaster muscle distal to the repair. In the second experiment (n = 20), the same reduction in blood flow typically resulted in larger repair-site thrombi which required significantly more time to grow to their maximum size. We conclude that reducing pedicle artery blood flow to approximately half in our rat model during reperfusion can protect the downstream microcirculation from embolic injury without increasing the incidence of thrombotic occlusion.
With a simple and strictly applied regimen of prophylaxis with LMWH the overall rate of symptomatic VTE was very low in our hospitalized patients. Beside LMWH prophylaxis, shortening hospital stays and substantial improvements in surgical and anesthesia techniques achieved during the last decades probably play an essential role in decreasing VTE rates.
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