High prevalence of iliofemoral venous thrombosis with severe groin infection among injecting drug users in North East Scotland: successful use of low molecular weight heparin with antibiotics
A R Mackenziea, R B S Lainga, J G Douglasa, M Greavesb, C C Smitha
a Aberdeen
Royal Infirmary, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland: Infection Unit, b Department of Haematology
Correspondence to: Dr A R Mackenzie, Infection Unit, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland AB25 2ZB, UK (email: a.r.mackenzie{at}arh.grampian.scot.nhs.uk)
Submitted 8 December
1999;
Accepted 22 March 2000
Injecting drug use, mainly of heroin, currently represents a
major public health issue in the North East of Scotland. The recent
tendency of the committed injecting drug user to inject into the groin
has created novel problems for the Infection Unit.
Data are presented on 20 consecutive patients admitted between 1994 and
1999 with iliofemoral venous thromboses, often complicated by severe
soft tissue infections and bacteraemia as a result of heroin injection
into the femoral vein. Nine had coexistent groin abscesses, four had
severe streptococcal soft tissue infection of the right thigh, groin
and lower abdomen, and two had coincidental soft tissue infections of
the upper limb. Nine were bacteraemic on admission. All of the patients
were chronic injecting drug users with a median injection duration of
6.5 years. The 18 patients tested for hepatitis C virus were all
seropositive. None of the 14 patients tested was positive for HIV.
Seventeen patients were treated with subcutaneous low molecular weight
heparin (tinzaparin), three having received intravenous unfractionated
heparin initially. The tinzaparin was self administered and given for a
median duration of seven weeks. One patient declined to have any
treatment. Three months after presentation eight patients were
asymptomatic, seven had a persistently swollen leg, and five were lost
to follow up. None developed clinically apparent pulmonary embolism
after institution of anticoagulant therapy.
The management of iliofemoral venous thrombosis in injection drug users
is problematic because of poor venous access, non-compliance with
prescribed treatment, ongoing injecting behaviour, and coexistent sepsis. It is unlikely that a randomised trial of standard treatment with heparin and warfarin versus low molecular weight heparin alone
would be practical in this patient group. These retrospective data
indicate that the use of tinzaparin in injecting drug users is feasible
and appears to result in satisfactory clinical responses.
The possibility of concomitant infection in injecting drug users with
venous thrombosis should always be addressed, as it appears to be a
common phenomenon. Early drainage of abscesses and antimicrobial
chemotherapy, often administered intramuscularly or orally because of
lack of peripheral venous access, is central to the appropriate care of
these patients.
Keywords: iliofemoral venous thrombosis; intravenous drug abuse; groin abscess; low molecular weight heparin
© 2000 by The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine
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