DVT is treated with blood thinners and monitored to prevent complications and recurrence. A record of imaging, anticoagulant details, and follow-up supports safe long-term care.
Also known as: DVT, blood clot in leg, venous thrombosis.
Common symptoms of Deep Vein Thrombosis
People living with deep vein thrombosis may notice some of the following. Recording what you observe — and when — gives your clinician a clearer picture.
- Leg swelling
- Pain or tenderness in the leg
- Warmth in the affected area
- Skin redness
What to track for Deep Vein Thrombosis
Good records turn a stack of paper into answers. For deep vein thrombosis, it helps to keep:
- Ultrasound and imaging reports
- Anticoagulant and INR details
- Episode dates
- Follow-up appointment notes
How Hamdosh helps with Deep Vein Thrombosis
Hamdosh is your family's medical memory. Every prescription, lab result, and visit note for deep vein thrombosis is captured with OCR, grouped into encounters, and made searchable — with a one-tap outcome on each treatment so you can answer "what actually worked?" Your records are encrypted at rest, and you control exactly who in the household can see them.
- One timeline for every deep vein thrombosis document, across clinics and years.
- Natural-language search: "what was prescribed last time?" returns the script and the outcome.
- Treatment-outcome tracking so the record shows what helped — not just what was tried.