Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in critically ill patients still represents a clinical challenge. The aim of the study was to investigate whether a systematic ultrasound (US) screening might improve the ...management of the antithrombotic therapy in intensive care unit (ICU). In this non-randomized diagnostic clinical trial, 100 patients consecutively admitted to ICU of the University Hospital of Perugia were allocated either in the screening group or in the control group. Subjects in the screening group underwent US examination of lower limbs 48 h after admission, and again after 5 days. Subjects in the control group underwent US examination according to the standard of care (SOC) of the enrolling institution. Retrospectively registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05019092) on 24.08.2021. Lower limb DVT was significantly more frequent in the screening group (
p
< 0.001), as well as the subsequent extension of a pre-existing DVT (
p
= 0.027). In the control group, DVT of large veins was more frequent (
p
= 0.038). Major bleedings were reported in 5 patients, 4 in the non-screening group and in 1 in the screening group. Patients in the screening group started the antithrombotic treatment later (
p
= 0.038), although the frequency, dose and duration of the treatment were not different between the two groups. The duration of stay in ICU was longer in the screening group (
p
= 0.007). Active screening for DVT is associated with an increased diagnosis of DVT. The screening could be associated with a reduced incidence of proximal DVT and a reduction in the bleeding risk.
Isolated systolic hypertension (ISH), defined as brachial systolic blood pressure (bSBP) ≥140 mmHg and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) <90 mmHg, is highly prevalent among young subjects and in the ...elderly. The prognostic significance of ISH in young individuals remains the object of large debate which might be solved, at least in part, if considering the prognostic role of central BP. For any given value of pBP, the cardiovascular (CV) risk is better defined by central BP (cBP). Young individuals with ISH have long been considered at low CV risk, given the assumption that a "spurious hypertension" phenotype characterized by elevated peripheral (brachial) BP (pBP), normal cBP, and elevated BP amplification was often found in this population. However, this remains to be proven, because many other studies found no differences in BP amplification between ISH and sisto-diastolic hypertension. Despite numerous attempts, methodologies for cBP assessment by non-invasive devices are currently not standardized. As a result, different devices could provide different cBP values despite using the same biological signals. Devices providing accurate estimates of BP amplification as a dimensionless ratio between amplitudes of central and peripheral arterial waveforms might be well suited for clinical purposes in young individuals with ISH. There is urgent need of well-designed prospective studies aiming at longitudinally evaluating the amount of CV risk associated with elevated cBP in young subjects with ISH and their related incremental prognostic value.