Abstract
In a prospective study, 174 patients (118 women and 56 men, average age 44 years, range 14 to 82) with proximal extensive thrombosis received streptokinase (100,000 U/hour) for an average of 2.8 days (range 0.5 to 7) through the catheter of a temporary caval fitter. Twenty-seven of 45 (60%) patients with nonocclusive clots were completely free of clots at the second phlebography versus 17 of 116 (14%) with occlusive clots (p < 0.001). Among nonocclusive clots, proximal ones (caval, iliac and femoral) were more easily lysed than popliteal clots (88 of 116 [76%] vs 26 of 58 [45%]; p < 0.001). In 41 of 132 (31%) patients, a daily injection of contrast medium through the filter-carrying catheter enabled the observation of a clot in the filter, which was lysed by streptokinase. Seventy patients with follow-up >2 years (median 34 months) were examined clinically. Nineteen of 22 (86%) patients with venograms free of clots at discharge were free of clinical sequelae versus 16 of 48 (33%) without normal venograms (p < 0.001). It is concluded that: (1) in the case of occlusive clots, only a few patients were normalized after streptokinase; (2) proximal nonocclusive clots were most effectively lysed; (3) when venograms were free of clots at discharge, the majority of patients did not have venous sequelae at follow-up; and (4) embolie migration seems to occur frequently with streptokinase.
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