has spoken at length about a frightening encounter she had with VTE while she was hospitalized in 2017. Head injuries prompting brain bleeds are of particular concern. This has caused NASCAR driver
Brian Vickers to forgo participation in races. Professional basketball players including NBA players
Victor Wembanyama,
Chris Bosh, and hall of famer
Hakeem Olajuwon have dealt with recurrent blood clots, and Bosh's career was significantly hampered by DVT and PE. Tennis star
Serena Williams was hospitalized in 2011 for PE thought to have originated from DVT. Years later, in 2017, due to her knowledge of DVT and PE, Serena accurately
advocated for herself to have a PE diagnosed and treated. During this encounter with VTE, she was hospitalized after a
C-section surgery and was off blood thinners. After feeling the sudden onset of a PE symptom, shortness of breath, she told her nurse and requested
a CT scan and an IV heparin drip, all while gasping for air. She started to receive an ultrasound to look for DVT in the legs, prompting her to express dissatisfaction with the medical staff, who were not looking for clots where she had symptoms (her lungs), and they were not yet treating her presumed PE. After being diagnosed with PE and not DVT, and after receiving heparin IV, the coughing from the PE caused her C-section surgical site to open, and the heparin contributed to bleeding at the site. Serena later received an IVC filter while in the hospital. Other notable people have been affected by DVT. Former United States President
Richard Nixon had recurrent DVT, and so has former Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton. She was first diagnosed while
First Lady in 1998 and again in 2009.
Dick Cheney was diagnosed with an episode while
Vice President, and TV show host
Regis Philbin had DVT after hip-replacement surgery. DVT has also contributed to the deaths of famous people. For example, DVT and PE played a role in rapper
Heavy D's death at age 44. NBC journalist
David Bloom died at age 39 while covering the Iraq War from a PE that was thought to have progressed from a missed DVT, and actor
Jimmy Stewart had DVT that progressed to a PE when he was 89.
History The book
Sushruta Samhita, an
Ayurvedic text published around 600–900 BC, contains what has been cited as the first description of DVT. In 1271, DVT symptoms in the leg of a 20-year-old male were described in a French manuscript, which has been cited as the first case or the first Western reference to DVT. In 1856, German physician and pathologist
Rudolf Virchow published his analysis after the insertion of foreign bodies into the jugular veins of dogs, which migrated to the pulmonary arteries. These foreign bodies caused pulmonary emboli, and Virchow was focused on explaining their consequences. He cited three factors, which are now understood as hypercoagulability, stasis, and endothelial injury. It was not until 1950 that this framework was cited as Virchow's triad, Diagnoses were commonly performed by
impedance plethysmography in the 1970s and 1980s, but ultrasound, particularly after the utility of probe compression was demonstrated in 1986, became the preferred diagnostic method. Multiple pharmacological therapies for DVT were introduced in the 20th century: oral anticoagulants in the 1940s,
subcutaneous injections of LDUH in 1962 and subcutaneous injections of LMWH in 1982. 1974 was when vascular inflammation and venous thrombosis were first proposed to be interrelated. For around 50 years, a months-long warfarin (Coumadin) regimen was the mainstay of pharmacological treatment. To avoid the blood monitoring required with warfarin and the injections required by heparin and heparin-like medicines,
direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) were developed.
The New York Times described a "furious battle" among the three makers of these drugs "for the prescription pads of doctors".
Economics VTE costs the US healthcare system about $7 to 10 billion annually. In Europe, the costs for an initial VTE hospitalization are significantly less, costing about
€2000 to 4000 (2011 estimate). Post-thrombotic syndrome is a significant contributor to DVT follow-up costs. Outpatient treatment significantly reduces costs, and treatment costs for PE exceed those of DVT. ==Research directions==