5-Minute Clinical Consult

Superficial Thrombophlebitis

Superficial Thrombophlebitis was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.

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Basics

Description

  • Superficial thrombophlebitis is an inflammatory condition of the veins with secondary thrombosis.
  • Traumatic thrombophlebitis types:
    • Injury
    • IV catheter related
    • Intentional (i.e., sclerotherapy)
  • Septic (suppurative) thrombophlebitis types:
    • Iatrogenic, long-term IV catheter use
    • Infectious, mainly syphilis and psittacosis
  • Aseptic thrombophlebitis types:
    • Primary hypercoagulable states: Disorders with measurable defects in the proteins of the coagulation and/or fibrinolytic systems
    • Secondary hypercoagulable states: Clinical conditions with a risk of thrombosis
  • Mondor disease:
    • Rare presentation of anterior chest/breast veins of women
  • System(s) affected: Cardiovascular
  • Synonym(s): Phlebitis; Phlebothrombosis

Geriatric Considerations
Septic thrombophlebitis is more common; prognosis is poorer.

Pediatric Considerations
Subperiosteal abscesses of adjacent long bone may complicate the disorder.

Pregnancy Considerations
  • Associated with increased risk of aseptic superficial thrombophlebitis
  • NSAIDs are contraindicated.

Epidemiology

  • Predominant age:
    • Traumatic/IV related has no predominate age/sex
    • Aseptic primary hypercoagulable state:
      • Childhood to young adult
    • Aseptic secondary hypercoagulable state:
      • Mondor disease: Women, ages 21–55 years
      • Thromboangiitis obliterans onset: Ages 20–50 years
  • Predominant sex:
    • Suppurative: Male = Female
    • Aseptic:
      • Mondor: Female > Male (2:1)
      • Thromboangiitis obliterans: Female > Male (1–19% of clinical cases)
Incidence
  • Septic:
    • Incidence of catheter-related thrombophlebitis is 88/100,000 persons.
    • Develops in 4–8% if cutdown is performed
  • Aseptic primary hypercoagulable state: Antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II deficiency incidence is 50/100,000 persons.
  • Aseptic secondary hypercoagulable state:
    • In pregnancy, 49-fold increased incidence of phlebitis
    • Superficial migratory thrombophlebitis in 27% of patients with thromboangiitis obliterans
Prevalence
  • Superficial thrombophlebitis is common.
  • 1/3 of patients in a medical ICU develop thrombophlebitis that eventually progresses to the deep veins.

Risk Factors

  • Nonspecific:
    • Immobilization
    • Obesity
    • Advanced age
    • Postoperative states
  • Traumatic/Septic:
    • IV catheter (plastic > coated)
    • Lower extremity IV catheter
    • Cutdowns
    • Cancer, debilitating diseases
    • Burn patients
    • AIDS
    • Varicose veins
  • Aseptic:
    • Pregnancy
    • Oral contraceptives
    • Surgery, trauma, infection
    • Hypercoagulable state (i.e., factor V, protein C or S deficiency, others)
  • Thromboangiitis obliterans: Persistent smoking
  • Mondor disease:
    • Breast cancer or breast surgery

Genetics
Not applicable other than hypercoagulable states

General Prevention

  • Avoidance of lower extremity cannulations/IV
  • Insertion under aseptic conditions, securing cannulas, and replacing q72h
  • Avoiding stasis or using usual deep vein thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis in high-risk patients (i.e., ICU, immobilized)

Pathophysiology

  • Similar to DVT and Virchow triad. A combination of vessel trauma, stasis, and hypercoagulability whether it is genetic, iatrogenic, or idiopathic
  • Mondor disease pathophysiology not completely understood

Etiology

  • Septic:
    • Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Peptostreptococcus sp.
    • Candida sp.
  • Aseptic primary hypercoagulable state:
    • Due to inherited disorders of hypercoagulability
  • Aseptic secondary hypercoagulable states:
    • Malignancy (Trousseau syndrome: Recurrent migratory thrombophlebitis): Most commonly seen in metastatic mucin or adenocarcinomas of the GI tract (pancreas, stomach, colon, and gallbladder), lung, prostate, and ovary
    • Pregnancy
    • Oral contraceptives
    • Behçet, Buerger, or Mondor disease

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