Diseases of The Veins: Dr. Pisake Boontham M.D., Ph.D. Department of Surgery Phramongkutklao Hospital

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Diseases of the veins

Dr. Pisake Boontham M.D., Ph.D.


Department of surgery
Phramongkutklao hospital
Lecture Objectives
 Anatomy of leg veins
 Venous Insufficiency: varicose veins
 Deep Vein Thrombosis
MAJOR VEINS
Anatomy principles
 Superficial venous system
 Long saphenous vein
 Short saphenous vein

 Deep venous system


 Perforating veins
Anatomy
Perforating Veins
Valves
 More frequent distally
 Ensure one way flow
 SUPERFICIAL TO DEEP
 DISTAL TO PROXIMAL
 Essential to passive
calf pump system of
venous return
Varicose veins
 Varicose veins affect
 20 - 25% of adult females
 10 - 15% of adult males

 75,000 operations are performed annually in


United Kingdom

 20% of operations are for recurrent disease

 May develop anywhere in body, but most


develop in lower extremities: Long Saphenous
Factors associated with
varicose veins
 Inherited
 Female > Male: age > 35 years
 Pregnancy – smooth muscle relaxation
 Western lifestyle: Whites > Blacks
 Prolonged standing
Varicose Veins
 Causes
 Severe damage or trauma to saphenous
vein
 Effects of gravity produced by long periods
of standing
 Types
 Primary: no deep veins involved
 Secondary: caused by obstruction of deep
veins (Most Common)
The long saphenous vein (LSV) and its tributaries most often form varicose
veins The short saphenous vein (SSV) and its tributaries can also become
varicose but less often
The veins in the leg are divided into two systems; the deep and the superficial veins
The two systems are linked periodically by perforating veins. A superficial vein can
become varicose because a perforating vein is allowing blood to flow the wrong way
(outwards)
Normal vs Abnormal
Varicose veins
 Consequence of
superficial vein valve
failure (incompetent
valves)

 Pooling of blood distal to


incompetent valve (blood
flows backwards, from
deep to superficial veins)

 Vein wall distended


Pathophysiology

 Thin-walled, unsupported veins


 Few valves
 Abnormalities in collagen
 Pregnancy
 Gravity
 Upright position
Pathophysiology
 Major cause: sustained stretching of
vascular wall die to long-standing increased
intravenous pressure
 Valves become incompetent because they
cannot close properly due to stretching
 Prolonged standing, the force of gravity, lack
of lower limb exercise, & incompetent
venous valves all weaken muscle-pumping
mechanism, & return of venous blood to
heart decreases
 As client stands for long time, blood pools
and vessel wall continues to stretch, and
valves become increasingly incompetent
Varicose veins-pathophysiology
 Congenital or acquired valvular incompetence of
the deep and superficial veins along with
weakness of the venous wall
 Self-perpetuating cycle of venous reflux leading
to further vein dilatation and valve failure.
 Venous hypertension leads to fluid and protein
extravasation into the subcutaneous tissue-
edema
 Edema & high venous pressure results in
reduced local capillary flow and reactive hypoxia
leading to further inflammation and tissue
damage.
Clinical Manifestations
 No symptoms
 Leg fatigue &/or heaviness
 Itching over affected leg (stasis dermatitis)
 Feelings of heat in the leg
 Visibly dilated veins
 Telangiectasia veins
 Reticular varices
 Varicose veins
 Severe, aching pain in leg
 Thin, discolored skin above ankles
 Complications: insufficiency, stasis ulcers,
chronic stasis dermatitis, thrombophlebitis
Signs of venous hypertension

 Perimalleolar oedema
 Pigmentation
 Lipodermatosclerosis
 Eczema
 Ulceration
Pathogenesis
 Result of severe impairment of venous
return causing venous hypertension;
often with deep vein incompetence
 Haemosiderin deposition – eczema –
calf muscle hypertrophy – oedema –
lipodermatosclerosis
 +/- ulceration
Lipodermatosclerosis
Venous ulcer
Assessment of varicose veins
 History
 Examination; Identify distribution of
varicose veins - long saphenous (LSV) vs
short saphenous (SSV)
 No specific labs
 Diagnostic
 Doppler ultrasound
Assessment: Labs & Diagnostics
 No specific labs
 Diagnostics
 Doppler ultrasound flow tests &
angiographic studies or Duplex Doppler
ultrasound
 Trendelenburg tests assists w/diagnosis
Indications for duplex scanning
 Suspected short saphenous incompetence

 Recurrent varicose veins

 Complicated varicose veins (e.g. ulceration,


Lipodermatosclerosis)

 History of deep venous thrombosis 


Treatments
 Treat varicose veins
 Symptom control with compression
therapy
 Sclerosant injection for Telangiectasia &
Reticular veins
 Surgery to strip veins/disconnect
perforator veins
 Superficial vein ablation – laser/foam
Conservative Interventions

 Conservative measures include


antiembolism stockings and regular
walking & leg elevation

 Mild analgesics may relieve pain


Sclerotherapy
 Only suitable for below knee varicose veins
 Need to exclude SFJ or SPJ incompetence
 Main use is for persistent or recurrent
varicose veins after adequate saphenous
surgery
 Complications of sclerotherapy
 Extravasation causing pigmentation or
ulceration
 DVT
Indications for varicose vein surgery

 Most surgery is cosmetic or for minor


symptoms

 Absolute indications for surgery :

 Lipodermatosclerosis leading to venous


ulceration
 Recurrent superficial thrombophlebitis
 Bleeding from ruptured varix
Treatment of venous ulcer
 AFTER EXCLUDING ARTERIAL
DISEASE:
 4 layer compression bandaging
 Treat varicose veins
 Long term compression
Venous Stripping
ENDOVENOUS LAZER:
an alternative choice for surgery of varicose
veins
Indication
 Varicose veins with:
 Saphenofemoral junction reflux
 Primary insufficiency of GSV
 Lasser saphenous vein reflux
Contraindication
 Technical unable to access
 Risk for DVT: hypercoagulation
 Postphebitic limb
 Infected venous ulcer
 Medically high-risk patient
Advantages
 Minimally invasive procedure
 Ambulatory procedure
 Quick method
 No scaring
Outcome
Follow up (yr) Treated/ Continued
occluded occlusion (%)
<1 231/218 94

1-2 247/245 99

2-3 151/151 100

>3 72/72 100


Procedure
Recurrent varicose veins

 15 - 25 % of varicose vein surgery is for


recurrence

 Outcome of recurrent varicose veins


surgery is less successful

 Can be avoided with adequate primary


surgery
Reasons for recurrence
 Inaccurate clinical assessment
 Confusion as to whether varicosities are in
LSV or SSV distribution
 Can be avoided with use of hand held
Doppler
 Inadequate primary surgery
 10% cases SFJ not correctly identified
 20% cases tributaries mistaken for LSV
 Failure to strip LSV
 70% of those with SF incompetence treated
with sclerotherapy alone will develop
recurrence
 Neovascularisation
Deep vein thrombosis
 Very common especially in hospital patients
 Incidence of about 50-150 DVTs per 100,000
population per year
 Asymptomatic in 30% (calf veins only)
 10% pulmonary embolism when popliteal
vein and above involved
Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
 Most likely to occur in deep
veins of the calf (80%)
 25% of thrombi that occur in
calf will extend to the popliteal
& femoral veins
 PE may be the first sign of DVT
Risk Factors
 Hypercoagulable  OCP
state  Malignancy
 Age  Heart Failure
 Obesity  Infection
 Immobility  Inflammatory bowel
 Surgery  Nephrotic syndrome
 Pregnancy
Hypercoagulable state
 Factor V Leiden mutation
 Prothrombin gene mutation
 Protein C or S deficiency
 Antithrombin III deficiency
 Homocysteine
 Antiphospholipid syndrome
Pathophysiology: Virchow’s
Triad
 Stasis of blood
 Increased blood coagulability
 Injury to vessel wall

2 of 3 factors must be present for


thrombi to form
DVT Manifestations
 When clot is in formative stage, may notice no
symptoms
 Usually profound tenderness; affected extremity
may be larger (unilateral edema)
 Dull aching esp when walking: Most common
 Severe pain, esp when walking
 Cyanosis of extremity
 Slightly elevated temp
 General malaise
Diagnosis of DVT
 History
 Examination – swelling, tender,
redness, dilated superficial veins, low
grade pyrexia
 Duplex US + d-dimer. If still uncertain,
(MRI) venography
Homan’s Sign
 Was long considered classic manifestation—
this is no longer true

 Sign is not specific to DVT & can be elicited


by any condition of the calf

 As calf muscles contract, there is risk of


detaching thrombus from the wall
DVT
Prevention of DVT
 Mobilise ASAP
 Low compression stocking for
inpatients
 Prophylactic LMW Heparin
Treatment of DVT
 Medical therapy
 Heparinise immediately
 Warfarinise over next 3 days
 Long term warfarin

 Conservative therapy
 Exclude risk factors
 IVC filter! For PE prevention
 Surgery
Conservative Therapy: DVT
 Anticoagulants may be prescribed for severe
cases
 Strict bed rest until symptoms of tenderness
& edema resolve
 Legs elevated, knees slightly flexed, above
heart level to promote venous return &
discourage venous pooling
 TED’s or pneumatic compression devices
IVC filter
 Re-embolism despite
anticoagulation
 Anticoagulation contraindicated
 Extensive thrombus persists
Surgery
 Venous thrombectomy; done when
thrombi are lodged in femoral vein &
excision of clots is required to prevent
PE or to prevent gangrene
 Venous surgery is rarely indicated.
 Venous stenting combined with catheter-
directed thrombolytic therapy is being
used in some centers to treat patients
with iliofemoral venous thrombosis and
severe obstruction.

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