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Blood clots after surgery are often linked to use of a catheter

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Blood clots can form easily after surgery. That’s why doctors are advised to use medications to prevent them. A new study, however, has found that use of a catheter remains a risk factor for developing blood clots.

A blood clot forming in a deep vein occurs in about 40% of surgery patients with a 1% death rate -- unless protective measures are taken. Using anti-clotting medications reduces the risk of blood clots dramatically, but some surgeons have been reluctant to use them because they increase the risk of bleeding.

In a new study from researchers at UC Irvine, 2,189 surgeries were analyzed. The study found that the use of blood-thinning medications was high and the incidence of blood clots was low. But more than half of the clots that did occur were caused by central catheters.

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Efforts should be made to minimize the use of catheters or consider higher doses of blood-thinning medications when the catheters are present, the authors said.

The study is published Monday in the Archives of Surgery.

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