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Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics
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Prophylaxis for the prevention of venous thromboembolism after total knee ³


arthroplasty. A comparison between unfractionated and low-molecular-weight heparin. Fauno P. Suomalainen O. Rehnberg V. Hansen TB. Kroner K. Soimakallio S. Nielsen E. Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery - American Volume. 76(12):1814-8, 1994 Dec. We compared the efficacy and safety of low-molecular-weight heparin with that of low-dose unfractionated heparin in the prevention of venous thromboembolism after total knee arthroplasty in a prospective, randomized, multicenter trial. One hundred and eighty-five patients were randomly assigned to two groups: ninety-two received low-molecular-weight heparin (forty milligrams of enoxaparin the evening before the operation and once a day subsequently) and ninety-three received unfractionated heparin (5000 international units the evening before the operation and three times a day thereafter). The prophylaxis was continued until bilateral ascending venography was performed six to nine days after the * operation or, if venography was not done, until the eighth postoperative day. Venography revealed a prevalence of deep-vein thrombosis of 27 per cent (twenty-five of ninety-three patients) in the group that received unfractionated heparin and 23 per cent (twenty-one of ninety-two patients) Á in the group that received low-molecular-weight heparin. The difference was not significant (p = 0.6). Five patients (5 per cent) who received unfractionated heparin and 3 patients (3 per cent) who received low-molecular-weight heparin had a deep-vein thrombosis in the proximal veins. Two patients who received unfractionated heparin and one who received low-molecular-weight heparin had clinical symptoms suggestive of a pulmonary embolism. None of these three patients had a positive ventilation-perfusion scan. There were no deaths, major bleeding episodes, or wound hematomas necessitating operative intervention or discontinuation of the anticoagulation in the series. *



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.