25 research outputs found

    Avoiding blood transfusion in surgical patients (including Jehovah’s Witnesses).

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    When treating Jehovah's Witnesses, the surgical team should carefully discuss the risks and clarify which products and treatments are available and might be acceptable to the patient. A range of multidisciplinary pre, peri and post-operative blood conservation strategies can be employed to reduce the need for transfusion and should be considered in the management of all surgical patients

    Residual venous reflux after superficial venous surgery does not predict ulcer recurrence.

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    OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate the importance of venous reflux in ulcer recurrence following saphenous surgery. METHODS: Ulcerated legs (CEAP 5 and 6) with saphenous reflux were treated with superficial venous surgery plus compression as part of a clinical trial. Patients unfit for general anaesthesia (GA) underwent limited surgery under local anaesthesia (LA). Reflux in superficial and deep segments and venous refill times (VRTs) were assessed before surgery and 3-12 months post-operatively using duplex and digital photoplethysmography respectively. RESULTS: Of 185 patients treated with surgery, 15 failed to heal and 26 did not have a follow-up duplex. Within 3 years, 25 of the remaining 144 patients (17%) developed ulcer recurrence. Using a Cox regression model, the presence of residual venous reflux and change in reflux pattern were not found to be risk factors for ulcer recurrence (p=ns). LA was used in 4/25 patients who recurred compared to 28/119 who did not (p=0.60; Chi-square test). For legs with recurrence, median VRT before surgery was 10.5s (range 5-29) compared to 11s (range 6-36) after surgery (p=0.097, Wilcoxon Signed Rank test). However, in legs without recurrence, median VRT increased from 10s (range 3-48) to 15s (range 4-48) after surgery (p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Residual reflux following saphenous surgery is not the most important predictor of venous ulcer recurrence. Poor venous function as demonstrated by VRT may be a better predictor of recurrence in these patients

    Effect of foam sclerotherapy on healing and long-term recurrence in chronic venous leg ulcers.

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    INTRODUCTION: The ESCHAR trial showed that superficial venous surgery and compression in chronic venous ulceration achieved a 24-week healing rate of 65% and 12-month recurrence rate of 12%. Foam sclerotherapy treatment is an alternative to surgery. The aim of this study is to assess the effect of foam sclerotherapy on ulcer healing and recurrence in chronic venous leg ulcers. METHODS: Chronic venous leg ulcers (CEAP [clinical, aetiological, anatomical and pathological elements] 5 and CEAP 6) with superficial venous reflux were treated between March 2006 and June 2011 with ultrasound-guided foam sclerotherapy and compression.Venous duplex was performed on all legs before and after treatment. Twenty-four-week ulcer healing and one- and four-year ulcer recurrence rates were calculated using Kaplan–Meier survival analysis. RESULTS: Two hundred legs (186 patients) with chronic venous ulcers (CEAP 5: n ¼ 163 and CEAP 6: n ¼ 37) were treated with foam sclerotherapy. Complete occlusion was achieved in 185/200 (92.5%) limbs, short segment occlusion in 14/200 (7%) limbs and one leg segment failed to occlude. One patient suffered an asymptomatic non-occlusive deep vein thrombosis (DVT) diagnosed on duplex scan at one week and one presented with an occlusive DVT three weeks following a normal scan at one week. One patient developed an asymptomatic occlusive DVT at two weeks following a non-occlusive DVT diagnosed on initial one-week scan. Eighteen patients were lost to follow-up (3 moved away and 15 died of unrelated causes). The 24-week healing rate was 71.1% and one- and four-year recurrence rates were 4.7% and 28.1%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Foam sclerotherapy is effective in abolition of superficial venous reflux and may contribute to similar ulcer healing and long-term recurrence rates to superficial venous surgery. Foam sclerotherapy is an attractive alternative to surgery in this group of patients

    The incidence and characterization of deep vein thrombosis following ultrasound-guided foam sclerotherapy in 1000 legs with superficial venous reflux

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    Objective: The incidence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following ultrasound-guided foam sclerotherapy (UGFS) ranges from 0% to 5.7%. The aim of this study was to assess the incidence of DVT following UGFS in a single vascular center. Methods: Patients undergoing UGFS between December 2005 and September 2011 underwent quality control duplex imaging within 2 weeks of treatment. This was performed by an independent senior vascular technologist, and data were entered on a prospectively maintained database. Deep venous segments assessed included common femoral vein, femoral vein, above- and below-knee popliteal veins, gastrocnemius, and tibial veins. DVT when present was labeled as endovenous foam-induced thrombosis (EFIT) type 1 when thrombus was lining<25% of the lumen of the deep vein; type 2 when thrombus extension was 25% to 50%; type 3 when thrombus extension was 50% to 99%; and type 4 when the deep vein was occluded. Results: A total of 1166 UGFS treatments were performed in 1000 legs (776 patients). Complete occlusion of the treated veins was seen in 84.5% of the legs after one session of treatment. Overall, 17 DVTs were detected (1.5%) with no DVTs detected in legs undergoing multiple treatments. Of the 17 episodes of DVT, 16 legs had DVT following treatment for truncal reflux (658 legs; 2.43%). Seven DVTs were EFIT type 1, two were type 2, two were type 3, and five were type 4. One DVT was seen in the gastrocnemius vein alone. Two of 1166 treatments (0.2%) resulted in a symptomatic DVT, bothof which were EFIT type 4. On regression analysis, therewas an increase in the risk of DVT when ≥10 mL of foamwas injected (odds ratio, 4.63; 95% confidence interval,1.44-14.9; P = .01). Conclusions: The incidence of duplex-detected DVT following foam sclerotherapy is low and may be associated with the injection of ≥10 mL of foam. © 2013 Society for Vascular Surgery

    The Importance of Early Carotid Endarterectomy in Symptomatic Patients

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    INTRODUCTION: Early carotid endarterectomy (CEA) in symptomatic patients may prevent repeat cerebral events. This study investigates the relationship between waiting time for CEA and the incidence of repeat cerebral events prior to surgery in symptomatic patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A prospective database of consecutive patients undergoing CEA between January 2002 and December 2006 was reviewed. Repeat event rates prior to surgery were calculated using Kaplan-Meier analysis and predictive factors identified using Cox regression analysis. RESULTS: A total of 118 patients underwent CEA for non-disabling stroke, TIA and amaurosis fugax. Repeat cerebral events occurred in 34 of 118 (29%) patients at a median 51 days (range, 2-360 days) after the first event. The estimated risk of repeat events was 2% at 7 days and 9% at 1 month after first event (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis). Age (HR 1.059; 95% CI 1.014-1.106; P = 0.009] was identified as a predictor of repeat events. Patients underwent surgery at median 97 days (range, 7-621 days) after the first event. Eleven of 60 (18%) patients waiting < or = 97 days for surgery and 23 of 58 (40%) patients waiting > 97 days had repeat events. (P = 0.011, chi-squared test). CONCLUSIONS: Delays in surgery should be reduced in order to minimise repeat cerebral events in patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis, particularly in the elderly population
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