Iliofemoral Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
LARGE-VEIN CLOT & LEG SWELLING
Iliofemoral deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a blood clot involving the large deep veins of the pelvis and upper leg. Because these clots can cause major leg swelling, pain, impaired venous drainage, and higher complication risk, timely evaluation is important.
- Large-vein clot in pelvis or thigh
- Major swelling may develop quickly
- Urgent symptoms need prompt care
- Follow-up helps protect vein health
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
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Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Iliofemoral DVT is a more extensive form of deep vein thrombosis involving major pelvic and upper-leg veins, so diagnosis, severity assessment, and follow-up planning matter.
Care focuses on confirming the clot, assessing how much venous outflow is affected, reducing complication risk, and deciding whether medication, monitoring, or selected image-guided treatment options should be considered.
Overview
What is Iliofemoral DVT?
Iliofemoral DVT occurs when a clot forms in the iliac and femoral veins, which are large deep veins that carry blood from the leg and pelvis back toward the heart. Because these veins handle major blood flow, symptoms can be more severe than with smaller distal-leg clots.
Why Evaluation Matters
Evaluation helps confirm the clot location, estimate severity, and identify risk factors or warning signs. It also helps determine whether standard clot treatment is enough or whether more specialized vascular evaluation may be needed.
Symptoms
Symptoms can affect the whole leg and may progress quickly, especially when larger pelvic or upper-leg veins are blocked.
Whole-Leg Swelling
Swelling may involve the thigh, calf, ankle, or entire leg and can feel tight or heavy.
Pain or Tenderness
Pain may develop in the groin, thigh, calf, or behind the knee and can worsen with standing or walking.
Skin or Color Changes
The leg may look red, bluish, darker, shiny, or more tense compared with the other side.
Heaviness or Tightness
The affected leg may feel unusually heavy, full, tight, warm, or difficult to move normally.
Seek care now if…
Seek prompt evaluation if one leg becomes suddenly swollen, painful, discolored, very tight, numb, weak, or if chest pain, shortness of breath, coughing blood, or fainting occurs.
Causes & Risk Factors
Iliofemoral DVT can develop when blood flow slows, clotting risk increases, or a vein is injured or compressed.
Common Causes
- Recent surgery or hospitalization
- Limited mobility or long travel
- Prior DVT or clotting disorder
- Cancer or active inflammation
- Pregnancy or hormone therapy
- Major injury or vein trauma
- Vein compression in the pelvis
Identifying the cause matters because it can affect treatment duration, recurrence risk, and whether additional vascular imaging or follow-up is needed.
Risk Factors
- Previous blood clots
- Family clotting history
- Smoking or obesity
- Recent immobilization
- Active cancer or treatment
- Estrogen-containing medication
- Known vein narrowing or compression
Diagnosis
Diagnosis usually starts with symptom review and vascular imaging to confirm whether a clot is present and how far it extends.
Typical Evaluation
- Review swelling and pain pattern
- Check pulses and skin changes
- Duplex ultrasound when appropriate
- Assess clot location and extent
- Review clotting and medication history
- Consider advanced imaging when needed
- Evaluate pulmonary embolism warning signs
What to Bring
- Medication and allergy list
- Blood thinner history
- Prior ultrasound or imaging
- History of prior clots
- Recent travel or surgery details
- Cancer or clotting disorder history
- Symptom timeline and severity
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on clot location, symptom severity, bleeding risk, timing, medical history, and whether the clot is causing significant venous blockage.
Related care: Planning may include anticoagulation review, compression guidance, vascular ultrasound, clot-risk evaluation, and image-guided treatment discussion when symptoms or clot burden warrant closer review.
Risk Management
- Blood thinner review
- Bleeding-risk assessment
- Clot history review
- Risk-factor modification
- Medication coordination
- Pulmonary embolism awareness
Monitoring & Symptom Protection
- Leg swelling checks
- Compression guidance when appropriate
- Skin and color monitoring
- Activity guidance
- Pain and heaviness tracking
- Post-thrombotic symptom review
Vascular / Image-Guided Treatment
- Clot-burden assessment
- Advanced imaging when needed
- Thrombus-removal discussion
- Venous narrowing evaluation
- Stenting consideration in select cases
- Care coordination with specialists
Follow-Up Evaluation
- Repeat imaging when advised
- Medication-duration review
- Swelling response tracking
- Recurrence-risk planning
- Compression plan adjustment
- Long-term vein-health follow-up
Recovery
Recovery and management depend on clot extent, treatment approach, symptom severity, bleeding risk, and whether the vein remains narrowed or damaged after the clot improves.
What Helps Most
- Follow medication instructions: Blood thinners must be taken exactly as prescribed.
- Track swelling: Changes in leg size or tightness should be reported.
- Use compression as directed: Compression may help selected patients.
- Keep follow-up visits: Imaging and symptom checks guide care.
- Know warning signs: Chest pain or shortness of breath needs urgent care.
When to Follow Up
- Swelling worsens: The leg becomes more swollen, tight, or painful.
- Color changes appear: Skin becomes blue, dark, pale, or very red.
- Breathing symptoms occur: Chest pain or shortness of breath is urgent.
- Bleeding occurs: Blood thinner side effects need review.
- Pain persists: Ongoing heaviness or aching may need reassessment.
- Medication questions arise: Do not stop clot medication without guidance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Iliofemoral DVT is a blood clot involving the large deep veins of the pelvis and upper leg, usually the iliac and femoral veins.
It involves larger, more central veins and may cause more severe swelling, pain, venous blockage, and long-term vein symptoms than smaller clots.
Sudden one-sided leg swelling, severe pain, blue or dark color change, numbness, weakness, chest pain, shortness of breath, coughing blood, or fainting should be evaluated promptly.
Diagnosis often includes symptom review, physical exam, duplex ultrasound, and sometimes additional imaging to define clot extent or vein compression.
Some cases are managed with anticoagulation and monitoring, while more extensive or severe cases may need specialized vascular review for additional options.
Follow-up helps monitor symptoms, medication safety, clot response, recurrence risk, and possible long-term post-thrombotic vein problems.
Locations
LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures