Sixty-seven hip-arthroplasty and fifty-two hip-fracture patients
participated in a placebo-controlled randomized double-blind study on the
effects of low-dose heparin prophylaxis in the prevention of venous
thromboembolism. In this study, a positive thromboembolic event meant a
positive test by: (1) daily 125I-fibrinogen scanning, (2) contrast
venography on the tenth postoperative day, or (3) radionuclide perfusion
lung scan in confirmation of suspected clinical pulmonary emboli. Nineteen
(59.4 per cent) of thirty-two placebo-treated arthroplasty patients showed
evidence of a thromboembolic event in contrast with eight (22.9 per cent)
of thirty-five heparin-treated patients (p less than 0.003).
Heparin-treated arthroplasty patients required mean blood transfusions of
4.7 units, contrasted with a mean 3.2-unit transfusion requirement for
placebo-treated patients (p less than 0.05). The incidence of observed
bleeding complications was higher among the heparin-treated patients. Of
the twenty-three placebo-treated patients with fracturs, 39.1 per cent had
a thromboembolic event, while 41.4 per cent of the twenty-nine who received
heparin showed evidence of thromboembolism, demonstrating that low-dose
heparin afforded no protection, nor did it affect the incidence of bleeding
complications or transfusion requirements in fracture patients.