Venous Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are varicose veins?

A

Long, tortuous, dilated veins of the superficial venous system

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2
Q

What is the underlying pathology of varicose veins?

A

Blood from superficial veins passes into deep veins via perforator veins (sapheno-fem/pop juncn)
Incompetent valves –> venous hypertension – DILATATION

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3
Q

What is the anatomical distribution of varicose veins?

A
Long saphenous (med mall, up inner thigh to groin)
Short saphenous (popliteal, down back of leg)
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4
Q

What are the primary causes of varicose veins?

A

Unknown

Congenital valve absence (v. rare)

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5
Q

What are the secondary causes of varicose veins?

A

Superficial varicosities 2o to deep vein incompetence

  • Prev DVT
  • Raised systemic venous pressure (pelvic tumour, pregnancy, AVF)
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6
Q

What are the potential complications of varicose veins?

A

Ulcers (long term fluid buildup)
Blood clots
Bleeding

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7
Q

How are doppler ultrasound probes used to diagnose varicose veins?

A

Listen for flow in incompetent valves

  • veins occluded
  • on release flow >0.5-1 second indicates incompetence
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8
Q

What are the two main venous systems in the lower limb?

A

Superficial

Deep

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9
Q

Where does the deep venous system drain?

A

Muscular compartment

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10
Q

Where do the deep veins run?

A

Alongside the major arteries

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11
Q

What veins comprise the superficial venous system?

A
Long saphenous (medial) --> Saphenofemoral
Short saphenous (lateral) --> Popliteal
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12
Q

Where does the superficial venous system drain?

A

Skin

Superficial Tissues

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13
Q

Where are the deep and superficial venous systems joined?

A

Saphenofemoral

Saphenopopliteal

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14
Q

What are perforating veins?

A

Communications between the two systems

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15
Q

What drives venous return to the heart?

A

Muscular pump action by the calf

Inspiration decreasing intrathoracic pressure

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16
Q

What are the main sx of varicose veins?

A

Unsightly apperance
Tirdeness, aching
Oedema of ankles
Itching/nocturnal cramps

17
Q

What are the signs of deep venous insufficiency?

A

Haemosiderosis
Eczema
Lipodermatosclerosis

18
Q

What is deep venous insufficiency?

A

POSTPHLEBITIC LIMB
Incompetent valves of deep venous system
Calf pump no longer efficiently returns blood to thoracic cavity

19
Q

What are the causes of deep venous insufficiency?

A

Primary - Congenital absence of valves

2o - DVT, AVF

20
Q

What are the sx/signs of deep venous insufficiency?

A
Lower limb pain/discomfort
Oedema
Varicose veins
Haeomsiderin deposition (gaiter area)
Eczema
Atrophie blanche
Lipodermatosclerosis
Ulceration
21
Q

What investigations are appropriate in suspected deep venous insufficiency?

A

Duplex Sonography/Venography

22
Q

How can deep venous insufficiency be managed?

A

Only symptomatic management available

23
Q

What investigations are commonly used in venous disease?

A

Hand-held Doppler –> Identifies reflux at sapheno-fem/pop junctions
Duplex scanning - Valvular/perforating vv incompetence, large vv occlusion
Venography - Fluoroscopy used to find deep vv occlusion/perf vv reflux

24
Q

What is the Trendelenberg test?

A

No longer recognised method of diagnosis
Involves elevating the leg and applying tourniquets at different levels to identify the lowest point of deep-sup incompetence

25
Q

What are the indications for treatment for varicose veins?

A

Grossly dilated/symptomatic varicosities
Haemorrhage
Concomitant deep venous insufficiency
Incompetent perforator veins

26
Q

What are the non-surgical management options for varicose veins?

A

Lifestyle advice - avoid standing, exercise, wt loss
Graded compression stockings
Endothermal ablation - USS guided ablation of vv
Sclerotherapy - sclerosant injected into vv, compression bandaging for 2/52 allows fibrosis

27
Q

What are the surgical management options for varicose veins?

A

GOLD STANDARD
Disconnect great saphenous from femoral vv
Incompetent perforators ligated

28
Q

What are the potential complications of untreated varicosities?

A

Haemorrhage

Phlebitis - vv become hard, tender, erythematous