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Clinical probability of DVT

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

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The clinical diagnosis of DVT is generally thought to be unreliable. However, Wells et al. suggest a well-validated clinical prediction rule which could be used to estimate the pretest probability.

  • the original version classified patients into low, moderate or high risk, based on the presence or absence of clinical criteria
  • in the revised Wells scoring system, the risk categories were trimmed to “unlikely” or “likely” (1,2).

The revised Wells score or criteria for assessment of suspected DVT is mentioned below (with a possible score of -2 to 9):


Factor

Points

active cancer (treatment within last six months or palliative)

1

calf swelling ≥3 cm compared to asymptomatic calf (measured 10 cm below tibial tuberosity)

1

collateral superficial veins (non-varicose)

1

pitting oedema (confined to symptomatic leg)

1

swelling of entire leg

1

localised tenderness along distribution of deep venous system

1

paralysis, paresis, or recent cast immobilisation of lower extremities

1

recently bedridden ≥3 days, or major surgery requiring regional or general anesthetic in the previous 12 weeks

1

previously documented deep-vein thrombosis

1

alternative diagnosis at least as likely as DVT

-2

Clinical probability simplified score

  • DVT “likely” - 2 points or more
  • DVT is “unlikely” - 1 point or less (3)

The sensitivity for DVT of the Wells criteria is between 77–98% while the specificity is 38–58%. Therefore, it cannot be as the sole diagnostic modality for DVT (2)

Reference:


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The content herein is provided for informational purposes and does not replace the need to apply professional clinical judgement when diagnosing or treating any medical condition. A licensed medical practitioner should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions.

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