Incidence of and risk factors for iliocaval venous obstruction in patients with active or healed venous leg ulcers
William Marston1, PMID: 21215568 DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2010.10.120
- Abstract
- Results: A total of 78 CEAP clinical class 5 and 6 patients evaluated with either a CT or MR venogram were retrospectively reviewed. The average patient age was 59.3 years and 53.4% were men. The ulcer affected the left lower extremity in 46% of cases and 50% of patients reported a medical history of deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Overall, 37% of imaging studies demonstrated ICVO of at least 50% and 23% had obstruction of >80%. Risk factors that were found to be independently associated with a significantly higher incidence of >80% ICVO included female gender (P = .023), a medical history of DVT (P = .035), and reflux in the deep venous system (P = .035). No limb with superficial venous reflux (SVR) alone was found to have ICVO >80%.
- Conclusions: ICVO is a frequent and underappreciated contributor to venous hypertension in patients with venous leg ulcers. Women and patients with a history of DVT or duplex scan-diagnosed deep venous reflux (DVR) have a higher incidence of outflow obstruction and should be routinely studied with CT or MR venography to allow correction in this high-risk group of patients.
No comments:
Post a Comment