| Literature DB >> 29641492 |
Abstract
Venous disease is more common than peripheral arterial disease. Pathophysiologically, venous disease can be associated with obstruction, reflux, or both. A common feature in chronic venous disease is ambulatory venous hypertension. Inflammatory and pro-thrombotic mechanisms can be activated. The current therapies, including compression, ablation, and recanalization are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: deep vein thrombosis; post-thrombotic syndrome; venous disease; venous insufficiency; venous reflux
Year: 2018 PMID: 29641492 PMCID: PMC5920451 DOI: 10.3390/jcm7040077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
United States, British, and German standards for compression bandages in addition to recommended indications.
| United States | German Standard | British Standard | Pressure (mmHg) | Recommended Usage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light | KK1 | 3A | <20 | Mild C1–3 disease, or unable to tolerate higher grade |
| Class I | KK2 | 3B | 21–30 | C1–C3 disease |
| Class II | KK3 | 3C | 31–40 | More symptomatic C2–C3 disease, C4 or higher, PTS |
| Class III | KK4 | 3D | >40 | C5–6 disease (if not responding to lower grades) |
The pressure range for the German Standard is different (KK1 = 18–21, KK2 = 23–32, KK3 = 34–46, and KK4 ≥ 49 mmHg). C1: Spider or reticular veins, C2: varicose veins, C3: edema, C4: lipodermatosclerosis, pigmentation, eczema, or atrophie blanche, C5: healed venous ulcer, C6: active venous ulcer. PTS: Post-thrombotic Syndrome.
Figure 1The ClosureFast radiofrequency ablation catheter.
Figure 2The ClariVein mechanochemical ablation catheter.
Figure 3The VenaSeal cyanoacrylate delivery catheter.