Pain may be absent from the various manifestations making up a post-phlebitis syndrome but when it is present it varies considerably from one patient to another. Thus the very common feeling of heaviness, generally not painful, may be perceived as being painful by certain patients either because of the particular severity of the feeling or because of a low pain threshold in certain cases. Since no method for the objective measurement of pain exists, the assessment of this symptom and of its severity remains highly subjective, most often based upon statements by the patients. However, in practice a distinction can be drawn between the following: Pain related to venous stasis: a simple feeling of heaviness most often but which, in certain patients, may take on a painful connotation. Among such "stasis" pains, particular mention must be made of venous intermittent claudication, a progressive feeling of calf tension during walking which becomes increasingly painful and finally forces the sufferer to stop. This symptom is generally linked to the obstruction of a large collecting vein. Pain accompanying a leg ulcer usually results from secondary infection. Mention may be made of the role of inflammatory lesions developing around the trophic problem and which may encompass nerves, in particular the internal saphenous nerve. Although classical, causalgia type pain is certainly rarer. Demyelinisation of peripheral nerves has been suggested as being at its origin. Once again, the role of inflammatory processes linked to secondary infection appears to be notable. The treatment of pain in a post-phlebitis patient must take the greatest possible account of the pathophysiology of the post-phlebitis syndrome responsible: disinfection of a leg ulcer, treatment of venous stasis by elastic support, or by surgery or sclerosing injections. Sympathectomy has been suggested in causalgia type pain. In fact, this operation has scarcely any indications in post-phlebitis syndrome.
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Value Health
March 2006
CEMKA (Consultancy in Health Economics), Bourg-la-Reine, France.
Objectives: This paper presents an economic evaluation of a strategy of thromboprophylaxis in acutely ill medical patients with enoxaparin 40 mg vs. no intervention in the context of the French Health System.
Methods: The evaluation used a decision-analysis model to simulate the results of a hypothetical naturalistic, long-term study reflecting the usual care pattern for the patients.
Ann Med Interne (Paris)
September 2004
Service de Médecine Interne A, Hôtel-Dieu, CHU, Place Alexis-Ricordeau, 44093 Nantes Cedex 1.
Predisposing clinical features in pregnant women are poorly evaluated in the literature. Several factors are undeniable, for example extrinsic compression of the iliac vein (Cockett syndrome), post phlebitis disease, varicose vein disease, and, for most patients, unquantifiable risk factors. Careful assessment of the overall sensitivity to venous thrombosis, on the basis of history taking (patient and family), will allow better assessment of the predisposition to thromboembolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChir Ital
December 2001
Cattedra di Chirurgia Generale, Università degli Studi di Tor Vergata, Roma.
Post-phlebitis syndrome of the lower limbs is a set of symptoms that follow a state of phlebostasis and phlebolymphostasis with consequent oedema and tissue distress. We submitted 36 patients with post-phlebitis syndrome of the lower limbs to radioisotopic lymphoscintigraphy for the purposes of evaluating the vicariant function of the lymphatic system and the possible role of the lymphatic system in the genesis of dermo-epidermal abnormalities. The average age of the patients was 53.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhlebologie
September 1993
Service de Dermato-phlébologie de l'Université, Aachen, Allemagne.
The author reports the conclusions of a multicentre investigation lead in Germany. According to this study, varicose veins are more frequent in women than in men, either in ordinary population or in in-patients. Adults are not exclusively the only ones who suffer from varicose veins; children often suffer from them too.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhlebologie
January 1993
Istituto Dermopatico dell'Immacolata (IRCCS), Roma, Italie.
Deep venous insufficiency is present clinically in post-phlebitis syndrome (PPS), above all at the stage of incompetence, after venous recanalisation, and in primary deep venous insufficiency (PDVI). Its different anatomical and pathological patterns lead to a varied management approach. Venous bypass procedures (using the techniques of Palma, Warren-Hushi, etc.
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