View clinical trials related to Compression Ultrasound.
Filter by:In clinical practice, compression ultrasound (CUS) has become an easy and reliable noninvasive tool for the diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Currently there are not validated methods to assess the biological age of venous thrombus, and the date of onset of thrombosis. One potential technique to age DVT is ultrasound elastography (UE). UE is a noninvasive technique to measure tissue hardness, and it is well known that thrombi harden as they age. The aim of this study will be to assess the ability of UE to distinguish acute from chronic DVT. The investigators will evaluate prospectively all consecutive outpatients presenting with clinically suspected unprovoked DVT of the lower limbs, and those having a previous diagnosis of DVT for the scheduled 3 months visit of follow-up, for a period of about one year. All the enrolled patients will undergo to the CUS of the lower limbs, and at the same time to the ultrasound elastography by the physician expert in vascular ultrasound. The specialist performing both examinations will be unaware of the time of onset of DVT (acute or chronic). Then the patients will be divided into two groups (group A: patients with acute DVT; group B: patients with chronic DVT at the 3rd month of follow-up). Each examination (CUS and ultrasound elastography) will be repeated three times in the same patient at the same visit, to assess the reproducibility of the technique. The demographic data, medical history, physical examination and the results of CUS and ultrasound elastography will be collected in a case report form (CRF) by another investigator who does not perform the examinations. The blinded CRF will be submitted to a dedicated committee for statistical analysis.