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Medline

PubMed, a service of the National Library of Medicine

World Oncology Network

R.E.Kavetsky Institute of Experimental Pathology, Oncology and Radiobiology



Vol. 26, No. 1, 2004 (March)

Content

VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM IN ONCOLOGY

 

Anna Falanga*, Alfonso Vignoli

Department of Hematology-Oncology, Ospedali Riuniti di Bergamo, Bergamo, Italy

Abstract. Thromboembolic events represent well-recognised complications of neoplastic disease contributing, in a significant manner, to the morbidity and mortality from cancer. The close relationship between the activation of blood coagulation and tumor growth is known since 1865, when Armand Trousseau first described the clinical association between primary or idiopathic venous thromboembolism and an underlying occult malignancy. However, only in the last decades significant advances in this field have been achieved, both on the comprehension of the complex interactions between the tumor and the hemostatic system, and on the prophylaxis and therapy of the thromboembolic manifestations in cancer patients.

Key Words: thrombosis, acquired thrombophilia, thromboprophylaxis, cancer, low molecular weihgt heparin.

Language:  English

[full text]




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