Search results for "Incompetent perforators"
showing 2 items of 2 documents
Subfascial Endoscopic Perforator Surgery With Tumescent Local Anesthesia
2002
background. Subfascial endoscopic perforator surgery (SEPS) has become an established procedure. objective. To evaluate SEPS with tumescent local anesthesia (TLA) using an single-port device originally designed for that purpose. methods. Patients selected for SEPS received subcutaneous infiltration of TLA into the medial aspect of the calf 20 minutes before surgery. Bipolar coagulation and dissection were used to treat incompetent perforators. results. Fifty-one patients with 67 legs of CEAP stages C3–C6 underwent SEPS with TLA. In 40 patients or 53 legs (79.1%) TLA alone allowed successful completion of the SEPS procedure. Five patients with 7 legs (10.4%) required additional intravenous a…
Clinical meaning of incompetent perforators in the setting of post-thrombotic syndrome commentary
2015
In this issue of Phlebological Review Zolotukhin et al. [1] present the results of their study on recurrence of venous leg ulcers in post-thrombotic patients after endovenous laser ablation of incompetent lower leg perforators. They have found that not only the recurrence rate of these perforators was very high, but also that the procedure did not reduce the ulcer recurrence. This lack of clinical efficacy in terms of recurrence was different from the results of the well-known ESCHAR study [2]. In the ESCHAR study surgical ablation of incompetent superficial veins resulted in less frequent recurrences. From a hemodynamic and pathophysiological point of view a thermal ablation (such as laser…