Literature DB >> 21975063

Clinical analysis of the corona phlebectatica.

Jean-François Uhl1, André Cornu-Thenard, Bernadette Satger, Patrick H Carpentier.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The corona phlebectatica (CP) is classically described as the presence of abnormally visible cutaneous blood vessels at the ankle with four components: "venous cups," blue and red telangiectases, and capillary "stasis spots." Previous studies showed that the presence of CP is strongly related to the clinical severity of chronic venous disorders (CVD) and the presence of incompetent leg perforators. The aim of this study was to select the most informative components of the CP in the assessment of the clinical severity of CVD patients.
METHODS: A multicentric series of 262 unselected patients (524 limbs) consulted for CVD were clinically evaluated using a standardized form to record the CEAP "C" items and the presence of the four CP components. Standard categorical and ordinal statistics were used to describe the external validity of the CP components as severity indexes, taking the "C" classes as reference.
RESULTS: "Stasis spots" (P < .001; r = .44) and blue telangiectases (P < .01; r = .32) were linearly associated with the ascending order of "C" classes, whereas the relationship is less clear for the red telangiectases and the "venous cups." The association pattern of the four components showed that only the blue telangiectases and the "stasis spots" were consistent with each other. Blue telangiectases were found more sensitive (0.91 vs 0.75) but less specific (0.52 vs 0.80) than "stasis spots" for advanced venous insufficiency (CEAP "C4-6").
CONCLUSION: This study shows that only blue telangiectases and "stasis spots" provide valuable information in patients with CVD and deserve to be taken into account in the evaluation of such patients. Further studies are needed to show the reproducibility of this data, which we regard as essential for clinical use.
Copyright © 2012. Published by Mosby, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21975063     DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2011.04.070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Surg        ISSN: 0741-5214            Impact factor:   4.268


  1 in total

1.  From varices to venous ulceration: the story of chronic venous disease described by metalloproteinases.

Authors:  Raffaele Serra; Luca Gallelli; Lucia Butrico; Gianluca Buffone; Francesco G Caliò; Giovanni De Caridi; Mafalda Massara; Andrea Barbetta; Bruno Amato; Miriam Labonia; Selena Mimmi; Enrico Iaccino; Stefano de Franciscis
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2016-03-15       Impact factor: 3.315

  1 in total

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