Early experience of transilluminated cryosurgery for varicose vein with saphenofemoral reflux: review of 84 patients (131 limbs).

Ann Surg Treat Res

Department of Surgery, Hallym University Kangnam Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cryosurgery is a minimally invasive alternative to traditional surgical methods for treating varicose veins, specifically addressing great saphenous vein insufficiency, which is common among patients.
  • In a study involving 84 patients, treatment outcomes were monitored over two years, focusing on operative time and complications such as bruising and nerve damage.
  • Results indicated that cryosurgery had a low complication rate, with no significant recurrence of varicose veins, making it an effective and safe treatment option.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Varicose veins with great saphenous vein (GSV) insufficiency is prevalent. Among various surgical treatments for varicose veins, cryosurgery of GSV is an alternative minimally invasive technique that could leave fewer scars and replace conventional stripping with ambulatory phlebectomy. This study sought to assess outcomes including efficacy and safety of cryosurgery for varicose veins.

Methods: One hundred thirty-one limbs in 84 patients (37 male, 47 female; mean age, 53.3 years) with varicose veins were treated with cryosurgery over a 2-year period. The patients were followed for postoperative complication with surveillance of recurrence. The analyzed variables included age, sex, symptom, operative time (from skin incision to the application of elastic bandages on the legs for compression purposes), and postoperative complications including bruising, hematoma, superficial thrombophlebitis, cellulitis, seroma, cutaneous nerve damage, and wound complication.

Results: The mean operative time was 64.7 minutes for both limbs and 44 minutes for single limbs. The median number of incisions was 2. For stripping of GSV, one incision at the groin was necessary. Postoperative complications included an episode of hematoma in 3 limbs (2.3%), cutaneous nerve damage in 3 limbs (2.3%), cellulitis in 2 patients (1.5%), and seroma in 1 limb (0.8%). No wound infection, thrombophlebitis or deep venous thrombosis was observed. During follow-up (mean follow-up period, 13.5 months; range, 3-28 months), there was no recurrence.

Conclusion: Cryosurgery to treat varicose veins is an effective and safe treatment modality in terms of postoperative complication, cosmetic result, and recurrence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5566753PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4174/astr.2017.93.2.98DOI Listing

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