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Apex Nursing

Chart — Med-Surg

VTE Prophylaxis Comparison Chart

Preventing venous thromboembolism is one of nursing’s highest-impact routine jobs. The methods split into mechanical and pharmacologic — and the contraindications are what decide which a given patient gets.

Educational use only. Prophylaxis selection balances VTE risk against bleeding risk and is a provider/protocol decision; never apply mechanical compression to a limb with a suspected acute DVT. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Methods Compared

MethodTypeHow It WorksCandidatesContraindications / Cautions
Early ambulationMechanical (behavioral)Muscle activity pumps venous blood, defeating stasis — the single best preventiveEssentially every patient who can moveNone — the goal is to overcome the barriers (pain, lines, reluctance)
Sequential compression devices (SCDs)MechanicalSleeves inflate/deflate to mimic the calf pump and push blood upwardImmobile/post-op patients, or anyone who can't have pharmacologic prophylaxisSuspected/confirmed acute DVT in the limb, significant PAD, leg wounds/ulcers — must be ON and functioning to work
Graduated compression stockingsMechanicalGraded pressure (tightest at the ankle) supports venous returnSelected patients, often with SCDsArterial insufficiency; wrong size worsens circulation; less effective alone
LMWH (enoxaparin)PharmacologicInhibits clotting factors (anti-Xa); predictable, no routine monitoringModerate-to-high-risk patients without bleeding riskActive bleeding, severe thrombocytopenia, HIT history, renal impairment (dose-adjust)
Unfractionated heparin (low-dose SubQ)PharmacologicPotentiates antithrombin; short-acting, reversible with protaminePatients needing a reversible agent or with renal impairmentActive bleeding, thrombocytopenia; monitor platelets for HIT
DOACs (e.g., rivaroxaban, apixaban)PharmacologicDirect factor Xa/thrombin inhibition; oral, no routine monitoringSelected surgical/medical patients per protocolActive bleeding, severe renal/hepatic impairment; specific reversal agents exist

Exam Traps

  • Early ambulation is the best prophylaxis — the answer is rarely 'keep them in bed.'
  • SCDs only work when on and cycling — a device on the chair prevents nothing.
  • Don't apply mechanical compression to a leg with a suspected acute DVT — it can dislodge the clot.
  • Pharmacologic prophylaxis is held for active bleeding, severe thrombocytopenia, or imminent surgery.
  • Monitor platelets on heparin (HIT); LMWH and DOACs usually need no routine coagulation monitoring.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (AMSN) · Current medical-surgical nursing standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →