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PGY1 MICU 211
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Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis12 Topics|2 Quizzes
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DVT Prophylaxis10 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Hyperglycemic Crisis: Diabetic Ketoacidosis and Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic Syndrome11 Topics|3 Quizzes
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Introduction to Shock and Hemodynamics5 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Sepsis11 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Post-Intubation Sedation8 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Lesson 2,
Topic 6
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Management – Overview
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The key principles in DVT prophylaxis include:
- Risk stratification – Assess all hospitalized patients for VTE risk factors like critical illness, malignancy, and prior VTE.
- Initiate prophylaxis – Use risk assessment models to determine optimal prophylaxis regimen. Balance thrombosis and bleeding risks.
- Non-pharmacologic options – Mechanical prophylaxis like compression stockings can be used alone in high bleeding risk patients or with pharmacologic prophylaxis.
- Pharmacologic options – Include anticoagulants like heparin, LMWH, fondaparinux, and DOACs. Selection depends on renal function, risk factors, and procedure type.
- Duration – VTE prevention should begin at admission and continue through discharge based on persisting risk factors. Extend pharmacologic prophylaxis up to 35 days after major orthopedic surgery.
- Monitoring – Assess for signs and symptoms of VTE, bleeding, HIT, and therapeutic levels for certain agents.
The rationale is to reduce preventable harm from hospital-associated VTE, which affects ~900,000 patients annually in the US. DVT prophylaxis guidelines evolve as new evidence emerges on optimal agents, dosing, timing, and duration.
Pharmacists play a crucial role in appropriate DVT prophylaxis by assessing risks, selecting optimal regimens, monitoring for toxicity and efficacy, educating patients, and ensuring smooth care transitions.