Diagnostics (Feb 2024)

A Rare Cause of Deep Vein Thrombosis in a Young Orchestra Conductor

  • Anca Mihaela Lungu,
  • Irina Mariella Andrei,
  • Gabriela Uscoiu,
  • Mihai Grigore,
  • Adriana Mihaela Iliesiu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14040354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. 354

Abstract

Read online

Upper extremity deep vein thrombosis (DVT) of the axillary/subclavian veins is rare (5–10% of DVT). After clinical suspicion and duplex ultrasound, anticoagulation, surgical decompression and sometimes thrombolysis are mandatory due to complications. We discuss the case of a young healthy orchestra conductor with primary DVT of the left upper extremity and concomitant left shoulder musculo-tendinous traumatic injury. Symptoms of both conditions and subtle signs of upper extremity DVT delayed the diagnosis until full-blown DVT occurred. After successful anticoagulation and surgical TOS (thoracic outlet syndrome) decompression, evolution was favorable, without recurrent thrombosis.

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