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Clinical cardiology · Dec 2020
ReviewCOVID-19, thromboembolic risk, and Virchow's triad: Lesson from the past.
- Jawahar L Mehta, Giuseppe Calcaterra, and Pier P Bassareo.
- Division of Cardiology, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and the VA Medical Canter, Little Rock, Arkansas, USA.
- Clin Cardiol. 2020 Dec 1; 43 (12): 1362-1367.
AbstractCOronavirus Infectious Disease which started in 2019 (COVID-19) usually presents with the signs and symptoms of pneumonia. However, a growing number of recent reports highlight the fact that the infection may be by far more than only a respiratory disease. There is evidence of an increased thromboembolic risk in COVID-19 patients, with a variety of manifestations in terms of ischemic stroke, deep vein thrombosis, acute pulmonary embolism, acute myocardial infarction, systemic arterial embolism, and placental thrombosis. The German physician Rudolph Virchow, about two centuries ago, described three pivotal factors contributing together to thromboembolic risk: endothelial injury, hypercoagulability, and blood stasis. COVID-19-associated hypercoagulability is unique and distinctive, and has its own features involving the immune system. Many of the drugs proposed and currently undergoing evaluation for the treatment of COVID-19 have one or more of the Virchow's triad elements as a target. The three factors outlined by Virchow are still able to explain the venous and arterial hypercoagulable state in the dramatic COVID-19 setting. Nowadays, we have decidedly more sophisticated diagnostic tools than Virchow had, but many of the challenges that we are facing are the same as Virchow faced in the 19th century.© 2020 The Authors. Clinical Cardiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
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