Early-stage chronic venous disorder as a cause of leg pain overlooked for lumbar spinal disease.

Sci Rep

Department of Neurosurgery, Pohang Stroke & Spine Hospital, 352 Huimang-daero, Namgu, Pohang, Gyeong-sang bukdo, 37659, Republic of Korea.

Published: October 2023

Leg pain can be caused by both lumbar spinal disease and chronic venous disorder (CVD) of leg veins, but their clinical differences have not been thoroughly investigated. This study aimed to determine the incidence of CVD among patients visiting a spine center for leg pain. A total of 196 cases underwent ultrasound examination with a diagnosis rate were 85.7% (168 cases). CVD-diagnosed cases were divided into two groups based on the severity of lumbar spinal disease. The Clinical grades, symptom areas, and symptom types were compared. The differences in symptom improvements with vasoactive medication were also assessed. The most common symptom area was calf then the foot in CVD, while calf then thigh in lumbar spinal disease. Tingling-paresthesia was the most common symptom type for both, with pain and cramping similarly common in CVD and pain more common than cramping in lumbar spinal disease. Considering that the majority of CVD cases (78.6%) had minor cutaneous changes and almost half of cases (41.7%) had refluxes only in tributaries, significant differences in symptom improvement in CVD-dominant group suggested that early-stage venous reflux is a symptomatic disease and a possible cause of leg pain and other symptoms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10600168PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-45623-0DOI Listing

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