A scoring system to determine the relative risk for a deep venous thrombosis is called the suspected DVT.
Vein thrombosis and artery thrombosis are two different types of thrombosis (arterial thrombosis). While arterial thrombosis (and, in rare cases, severe venous thrombosis) impairs the blood supply and damages the tissue that is supplied by that artery, venous thrombosis (also called DVT) causes a blood clot to form in the affected area of the body (ischemia and necrosis). An embolus, which can be either an arterial or venous thrombus fragment, might migrate through the bloodstream and lodge in another location. A thromboembolism is this kind of embolism. When a venous thromboembolism (also known as a VTE) becomes lodged in the lung as a pulmonary embolism, complications may occur.
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