The Burden of Deep Vein Thrombosis and Risk Factors in Pregnancy and Postpartum—Mirroring Our Region’s Particularities
Catalina Filip, Sofia Alexandra Socolov, Daniela Roxana Matasariu, Alexandra Ursache, Karina Delia Pisla, Tudor Catalin Gisca, Elena Mihalceanu, Vasile Lucian Boiculese, Demetra Socolov

TL;DR
This study examines how risk factors like obesity and thrombophilia affect deep vein thrombosis and its complications in pregnant and postpartum women over 15 years.
Contribution
The study identifies obesity and hereditary thrombophilia as key risk factors for DVT and its complications in pregnant and postpartum women.
Findings
Obesity significantly increases the risk of DVT, pulmonary embolism, and cerebral venous thrombosis.
Hereditary thrombophilia is the main risk factor for pulmonary thromboembolism and cerebral venous thrombosis.
Preeclampsia and gestational diabetes showed significant but conflicting associations with DVT and its complications.
Abstract
(1) Background: The three factors within the Virchow triad play the leading role in the development of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) during pregnancy. (2) Methods: This research approaches the various risk factors associated with DVT and its most representative complications, pulmonary thromboembolism and cerebral venous thrombosis, in pregnant and postpartum women across a 15-year period (2007–2021). (3) Results: A total of 201 out of 287 patients with DVT had associated risk factors, while 86 did not present with any. Out of the 201 patients with risk factors, 47 developed pulmonary thromboembolism, while 12 experienced cerebral thrombosis. The statistical analysis of risk factors involved in DVT revealed high significance for obesity (OR 3.676; CI 2.484–5.439), gestational diabetes (OR 3.394; CI 2.101–5.483), hypertension (OR 2.325; CI 1.591–3.397), preeclampsia (OR 4.753; CI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Coagulation and Thrombosis Mechanisms · Venous Thromboembolism Diagnosis and Management · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
