| Literature DB >> 24399461 |
H A Martino Neumann1, Martin J C van Gemert.
Abstract
Physicists and medical doctors "speak" different languages. Endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) is a good example in which technology is essential to guide the doctor to the final result: optimal treatment. However, for the doctor, it is by far insufficient just to turn on the knobs of the laser. He should understand what is going on in the varicose vein. On the other hand, the physicist is usually not aware what problems the doctor finds on his road towards improving a new technique. We have tried to bring both languages together in the special on Ins and outs of endovenous laser ablation published in this issue of Lasers in Medical Science. The 13 articles include endovenous related clinical (de Roos 2014; Kockaert and Nijsten 2014; van den Bos and Proebstle 2014) and socioeconomical articles (Kelleher et al 2014), the first paper on the molecular pathophysiologic mechanisms (Heger et al 2014), fiber tips (Stokbroekx et al 2014), the future of EVLA (Rabe 2014), a review of EVLA with some important issues for debate (Malskat et al 2014), an excellent paper on transcutaneous laser therapies of spider and small varicose veins (Meesters et al 2014), as well as several scientific modeling articles, varying from a mathematical model of EVLA that includes the carbonized blood layer on the fiber tip (van Ruijven et al 2014) and its application to the simulation of clinical conditions (Poluektova et al 2014) via experimental measurements of temperature profiles in response to EVLA, radiofrequency waves, and steam injections (Malskat et al 2014) to a literature review and novel physics approach of the absorption and particularly scattering properties of whole blood also including the infrared wavelengths used by EVLA (Bosschaart et al 2014). The aim of our afterthoughts, the 14th article in this special, is to try to amalgamate the clinical and physical contents of these contributions, providing the reader with the bridge that overlaps these different backgrounds.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24399461 PMCID: PMC3953605 DOI: 10.1007/s10103-013-1499-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lasers Med Sci ISSN: 0268-8921 Impact factor: 3.161
Fig. 1Possible folding geometries of the (GSV) vein wall around the EVLA fiber catheter following tumescent fluid injection for several vein diameters. The catheter, shown as the inside rod, has an assumed diameter of 3 mm, the (blue displayed) vein wall an assumed thickness of 1 mm. The possible reduction in wall thickness due to the increased pressure by the tumescent fluid has been neglected. We define FWDR as the ratio of fiber diameter and inner vein wall circumference (π times the inner vein diameter). From left to right: a fiber with 0.6 mm diameter, b vein with an inner wall diameter of about 3 mm and FWDR = 6.4 %; c inner wall diameter of about 10 mm and FWDR = 1.9 %; d inner wall diameter of about 15 mm and FWDR = 1.3 %; e inner wall diameter of about 20 mm and FWDR = 0.95 %. For c and e, other folding arrangements are possible (not shown). Inner vein wall diameters between 3 and 15 mm will always include a combination of 1 and 3 wall thickness layers around the 3 mm diameter catheter. Inner vein wall diameters between 15 and 27 mm always include 3 and 5 wall thickness layers around the catheter. An inner vein diameter of about 27 mm has five layers around the whole catheter surface (not shown). Illustrations by Ron Slagter, Haarlem, The Netherlands