Singapore Health Expert Shares Thrombosis Risk Factors Everyone Should Know and Mitigate with WTD’s 60 For 60 Fitness Challenge
- Written by Reporters
- Prolonged immobility, whether in or out of hospital. Blood circulation in the lower limbs slows down when the body remains immobile, eg during prolonged bed rest, being seated for long hours, especially in an awkward posture, resulting in increased susceptibility to blood-clot formation.
- Hospitalization and major surgery: More than 60% of thrombosis cases were patients who had been hospitalized for too long or afflicted by vascular trauma after surgery. Their limited movement puts them at risk.
- Hospitalization and Severe illnesses: Patients with debilitative heart and lung diseases and those with severe infections and inflammatory conditions are prone to developing DVT during hospitalization.
- Cancer and cancer treatment - Compared with healthy people, cancer patients are 4 times more likely to develop thrombosis, which may then hinder their cancer treatment
- Oral contraceptives, hormone replacement and pregnancy: Estrogen-based oral contraceptives and medications increase the levels of clotting factors, thus predisposing to blood clots. Pregnant women are also at increased risk, as their blood becomes thickened throughout their pregnancy and the first 6 weeks after childbirth. In the general population, risks of VTE in healthy women who are on hormonal medications or pregnant is low; but in the presence of other additional risk actors, the VTE risks increases substantially.
- Cigarette's smoking and obesity are well established risk factors for atherosclerotic diseases have also been found to increase the risk of venous thromboembolism.
- Hereditary cause People with conditions such as antithrombin deficiency, protein C and protein S deficiency which are genetic predisposition with increased blood clotting abilities are predisposed to with venous thromboembolism (VTE). Other genetic predisposition such as Factor V Leiden and Prothrombin gene mutation which are common in the west are very rare here. There are also other hereditary predisposition towards VE which may not be well described, so if there is a family history of VTE, one must be careful to apply preventive measures in high risk situations.
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
About World Thrombosis Day (WTD)
Launched in 2014 and held annually on 13 October, World Thrombosis Day aims to increase public, healthcare professional and health care systems' awareness of thrombosis and, ultimately, reduce unnecessary deaths and disabilities from thromboembolic disease through a greater awareness of its causes, risk factors, signs and symptoms, and evidence-based prevention and treatment. The mission of World Thrombosis Day supports the World Health Assembly's global target of reducing premature deaths by non-communicable disease by 25 percent by 2025, as well as the World Health Organization's Thirteenth General Programme of Work 2019–2023, the Montevideo Roadmap 2018-2030 on NCDs and the Political Declaration of UNGA' Third High-level Meeting on NCDs. Visit www.worldthrombosisday.org for more information and to get involved.
About the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH)
Founded in 1969, the ISTH is the leading worldwide not-for-profit organization dedicated to advancing the understanding, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of thrombotic and bleeding disorders. ISTH is an international professional membership organization with more than 7,500 clinicians, researchers, and educators working together to improve the lives of patients in more than 110 countries around the world. Among its highly regarded activities and initiatives are education and standardization programs, research activities, meetings and congresses, peer-reviewed publications, expert committees, and World Thrombosis Day on 13 October. Visit ISTH online at www.isth.org
Source https://www.media-outreach.com/news/thailand/2023/10/11/252051/