Clinical meaning
VTE Prophylaxis involves specific alterations in vte prophylaxis physiology. The pathophysiology of VTE Prophylaxis encompasses changes in myocardial contractility, cardiac conduction, vascular resistance, endothelial function, or structural integrity depending on the primary mechanism involved. Key cellular processes include ion channel dysfunction, inflammatory mediator activation, oxidative stress, fibrotic remodeling, and neurohormonal dysregulation that drive the clinical manifestations of vte prophylaxis.
Diagnosis & workup
Diagnostics & workup: - Cardiac MRI for tissue characterization (edema, fibrosis, infiltration) - HbA1c for glycemic control assessment in diabetic patients - Thyroid function tests (hyperthyroidism causes high-output states) - Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring for white coat vs masked HTN - CBC with differential (anemia worsens cardiac ischemia) - CRP and ESR for inflammatory/infectious cardiac conditions - 12-lead ECG: assess rhythm, intervals, ST-T changes, axis deviation
Risk factors: - Chronic kidney disease (eGFR <60 mL/min) - History of preeclampsia or gestational hypertension - Cocaine or amphetamine use causing coronary vasospasm - Hypercoagulable states (Factor V Leiden, antiphospholipid) - Dyslipidemia (LDL >130 despite lifestyle modification) - Left ventricular hypertrophy on ECG or echo - Chronic hypertension with end-organ damage