High plasma D-dimer is a marker of deep vein thrombosis in acute stroke.

Journal: Journal Of Stroke And Cerebrovascular Diseases : The Official Journal Of National Stroke Association
Published:
Abstract

This study investigated whether plasma D-dimer level is useful for detection of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in patients with acute stroke. A total of 133 patients hospitalized within 3 days after stroke onset underwent duplex venous ultrasonographic examination of the lower limbs and repeated measurements of plasma D-dimer level. DVT was detected in 36 of 100 patients with ischemic stroke and in 25 of 33 patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) (76%; P < .001). Plasma D-dimer level on admission (7.5 ± 10.7 μg/mL vs 3.7 ± 10.1 μg/mL; P = .040) and its maximum level before the ultrasonographic examination (29.1 ± 48.7 μg/mL vs 5.5 ± 11.0 μg/mL; P < .001) were higher in the patients with DVT compared with those without DVT. On multivariate logistic regression analysis, the maximum D-dimer level was independently related to the identification of DVT (odds ratio [OR] 1.05; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.00-1.09 per 1-μg/mL increase; P = .045), but the admission D-dimer level was not when it was included instead of the maximum D-dimer level. In addition, female sex (OR, 4.99), ICH (OR, 5.20), high Wells clinical score (OR, 2.40 per 1-point increase), and low protein level (OR, 0.21 per 1-g/dL increase) were independently related to the identification of DVT. The optimum cutoff value of the maximum D-dimer level for positive DVT was 5.5 μg/mL (sensitivity, 89%; specificity, 82%). Our findings suggest that high plasma D-dimer level during the course of acute stroke can help detect DVT on duplex venous ultrasonography.

Authors
Takahiro Kuwashiro, Kazunori Toyoda, Naoki Oyama, Kayoko Kawase, Shuhei Okazaki, Keiko Nagano, Masatoshi Koga, Hiroshi Matsuo, Hiroaki Naritomi, Kazuo Minematsu