Study measure of how best to prevent blood clotsTreating hospital patients with thigh-length surgical stockings, rather than knee-high socks, can reduce life threatening blood clots, a new study suggests. Researchers found that knee-high stockings, which are similar to flight socks, do little in stroke patients to prevent deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a life threatening form of blood clot that can travel up into the heart and lungs. The CLOTS (Clots in Legs Or sTockings after Stroke) study from the University of Edinburgh highlights that the clot rate in stroke patients was higher among those fitted with the shorter stockings than for those with longer stockings. Another study, published last year by the same researchers, showed that thigh-length stockings did not usefully cut the risk of DVT in stroke patients.
This new study shows that short stockings are even less likely to help patients. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence have changed their guidelines based on these findings and no longer recommends that stockings are used for stroke patients. However, stockings are also very widely used to prevent blood clots in patients who undergo surgery. Clinicians mostly use short stockings, which are cheaper and easier to fit than thigh-length stockings. In Scotland, for example, about three-quarters of stockings used by the NHS are short. This study questions whether the widespread use of short stockings is appropriate given the greater risk of clots associated with their use. Use of short stockings may result in many more patients suffering potentially life-threatening clots.
The CLOTS trial included more than 3,000 stroke patients from 112 hospitals in nine countries. It is by far the biggest study to test stockings. Stroke patients fitted with below-the-knee stockings were 30 per cent more likely to develop deep vein thrombosis than patients fitted with thigh-length stockings. This could be because the most serious type of blood clots tend to be in the thigh, researchers suggest,
Although trials have shown that stockings reduce the risk of DVT in patients undergoing surgery, these have only tested long stockings. The researchers have not identified any studies which show that below-knee stockings work. David Clark, Chief Executive of Chest Heart & Stroke Scotland, said, "More than 150,000 people a year have a stroke in the UK and it is vital they receive the best possible treatment. This important research, which was seed funded by Chest Heart & Stroke Scotland , shows conclusively that short compression stockings do not benefit stroke patients.
We can now focus our efforts and research funding on finding a treatment which will reduce the risk of clots. " The team from Edinburgh are now testing another type of device which actively massages the legs to keep the blood moving which they hope will prevent CLOTS in stroke patients. The results from that trial are expected in about three years.. The CLOTS - Clots in Legs or sTockings after Stroke - trial was funded by the Medical Research Council (UK), the Chest Heart & Stroke Scotland charity and the Scottish Government Chief Scientist Office. The research was published in the journal The Annals of Internal Medicine.
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Hundreds of genetic variants in at least 180 loci have been identified as having an influence on adult human height, thanks to a large genome-wide association (GWA) study. The findings, reported in this week's Nature, provide biological insights into human growth and may also shed light on the architecture of complex genetic traits more generally.
Many human traits, including adult height, have a polygenic pattern of inheritance where the phenotype is influenced by the genetic variants at multiple loci. Joel Hirschhorn and colleagues report a GWA study of over 180,000 individuals. They identify over 100 new loci, bringing the total to 180, which in total account for about 10% of variation in human height. The loci were not clustered randomly but were enriched for genes involved in growth-related processes, which influence adult height.
The authors point out that their findings demonstrate that GWA studies are able to identify large numbers of loci that implicate potential causal genes. However, different approaches, including those targeting less common variants, will be needed to understand more fully the genetic component of complex human traits.
Nature(2010): Published online 29 September 2010
Jim Wilson, Alan Wright, Caroline Hayward, Veronique Vitart, Igor Rudan and Harry Campbell