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A prospective study of the fate of venous leg perforators after varicose vein surgery. | LitMetric

A prospective study of the fate of venous leg perforators after varicose vein surgery.

J Vasc Surg

Department of Surgery, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Published: December 2005

Objective: To describe the fate of perforator veins after surgical treatment of varicose veins and factors that influence this.

Methods: This prospective study of 104 patients assessed perforator veins by using duplex ultrasound scanning in 145 limbs before superficial vein surgery for varicose veins. Veins were marked preoperatively with ultrasound guidance and ligated with an open procedure; those missed were later treated with sclerotherapy. Duplex ultrasound scans and air plethysmography were used to confirm surgical success within 1 month and to monitor recurrence at 6 months, 1 year, and 3 years.

Results: A total of 850 incompetent perforators were treated, but 5.7% were missed and required further ablation. After 3 years, 75.8% of the limbs had developed further incompetent perforators for a total of 380 incompetent perforators. The number of ultrasound-detectable competent perforators had also increased from 356 to 1047 in that time. The incompetent perforators arose by (1) new vessel formation at the site of previous ligation in 152 (40.4%), (2) changes in pre-existing perforator vessels at other sites in 225 (59.2%), and (3) vessels missed at treatment (< 1%). The diameter of the neovascular channels (3.0 +/- 1.0 mm) was greater than the other incompetent perforators (2.7 +/- 1.0 mm; P < .001). The anatomic distribution of the neovascular recurrences was also different, with 63% found in the paratibial region. The number of new incompetent perforators in a limb was associated with the clinical and physiologic severity of venous disease before surgery, but not to body mass index, gender, or age (P < .01).

Conclusion: This study shows that incompetent perforator recurrence after surgery is far more common than previously recognized and is primarily due to either neovascularization of previously ligated perforators or the development of incompetence in newly detected perforators in association with persistent venous disease rather than due to poor surgery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvs.2005.09.001DOI Listing

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