48 results match your criteria: "RANE Center for Venous and Lymphatic Diseases[Affiliation]"

Diagnosis of chronic iliac venous obstruction.

J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord

July 2024

Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, OH.

Stenting has become the first line of treatment for symptomatic chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction in patients with quality-of-life-impairing clinical manifestations who have failed conservative therapy. Patient selection for such intervention is, however, dependent on clear identification of relevant clinical manifestations and subsequent testing to confirm the diagnosis. In this regard, the physician engaged in management of such patients needs to be well-aware of symptoms and signs of chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction, and instruments used to grade chronic venous insufficiency and determine quality of life, in addition to diagnostic tests available and their individual roles.

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The Society for Vascular Surgery, the American Venous Forum, and the American Vein and Lymphatic Society recently published Part I of the 2022 clinical practice guidelines on varicose veins. Recommendations were based on the latest scientific evidence researched following an independent systematic review and meta-analysis of five critical issues affecting the management of patients with lower extremity varicose veins, using the patients, interventions, comparators, and outcome system to answer critical questions. Part I discussed the role of duplex ultrasound scanning in the evaluation of varicose veins and treatment of superficial truncal reflux.

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Unlike arterial disease, chronic venous disease (CVD) is rarely life-threatening or limb-threatening. However, it can impose substantial morbidity on patients by influencing their lifestyle and quality of life (QoL). The aim of this nonsystematic narrative review is to provide an overview of the most recent information on the management of CVD and specifically, iliofemoral venous stenting in the context of personalized considerations for specific patient populations.

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Objective: Femoroiliocaval stenting has become the standard of care for patients with quality-of-life impairing chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction not responding to conservative measures. Although improvement after stenting has been noted in multiple large studies, sizing of stents has been subjective in nature with a general tendency to use smaller stents that would be required to relieve venous hypertension. This study evaluates the authors' technique of using the intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) inflow channel luminal area to guide stent sizing.

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Objective: The goal of endovenous stenting is to relieve venous obstruction and reduce peripheral venous hypertension by using large caliber venous stents in the presence of adequate venous inflow and outflow for the stented conduit. The aim of this report is to describe the technical reasons and outcomes for reinterventions in a subset of patients who had a history of iliac vein stenting and were now referred to us at a specialty venous clinic for further care.

Methods: From January 2016 to December 2021, records of all patients who were referred to us with a history of iliac vein stenting performed at an outside facility and who had a reoperation performed at our center were retrospectively analyzed.

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Background: The Reynolds number (R) is a dimensionless parameter that describes fluid flow mechanics. Veins are compliant and collapsible vascular conduits that can accommodate large volume changes in response to small pressure changes. However, only sparse information is available about flow parameters such as the R in the venous system.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The Society for Vascular Surgery and other organizations updated their 2011 guidelines to provide new evidence-based recommendations for treating patients with varicose veins.
  • - Recommendations are founded on recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses focusing on diagnostic tests and treatment options for lower extremity varicose veins, particularly CEAP class 2.
  • - Part I of the guidelines covers evaluation methods using duplex ultrasound, compares open surgical treatments with endovenous ablation techniques, and discusses managing incompetent perforating veins and varicose tributaries using various sclerotherapy methods.
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Background: We have recently demonstrated in a large patient cohort that the prevalence and severity of reflux will improve in most limbs after stenting and that most limbs will not develop new-onset reflux. In the present report, we have focused on the long-term clinical outcomes associated with untreated reflux in the same patient cohort who had undergone iliofemoral venous stenting without correction of residual reflux.

Methods: The clinical outcomes data from 1379 limbs treated with only iliac vein stenting without correction of superficial or deep reflux from 1997 to 2018 were analyzed (23-year follow-up period).

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Utility of a percutaneous mechanical thrombectomy device in retrieval of an iatrogenic intravascular foreign body.

J Vasc Surg Cases Innov Tech

September 2022

The RANE Center for Venous and Lymphatic Diseases, St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, MS.

Intravascular foreign bodies can result from endovascular procedures and from other medical implants and devices. A wide variety of techniques and devices have been described for the retrieval of such intravascular foreign bodies in reported studies. In the present report, we have described the case of a patient with a symptomatic left innominate vein deep vein thrombosis who also had a retained catheter fragment from a fractured tunneled infusion catheter in the left innominate vein.

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Occlusion is a challenging complication of endovenous stenting. The treatment of chronic iliofemoral stent occlusion involves wire recanalization followed by balloon angioplasty. However, this approach will not always be successful.

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Objective: Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome (KTS) is a congenital mixed mesenchymal malformation syndrome that includes varicose veins, capillary and venous malformations, lymphatic abnormalities, and hypertrophy of various connective tissue elements. The purpose of the present study was to describe the clinical characteristics and outcomes in a subset of patients with KTS in whom venous interventions, including iliofemoral venous stenting, were performed after failure of conservative therapy.

Methods: A single-center retrospective data review of 34 patients with KTS who had undergone interventions for venous disease between January 2000 and December 2020 was performed.

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Reply.

J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord

July 2022

RANE Center for Venous and Lymphatic Diseases, St Dominic Hospital, Jackson, MS.

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Background: The diagnosis of chronic iliofemoral venous obstruction (CIVO) can be made with several different modalities. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) examination is the gold standard in the diagnosis of CIVO. However, being invasive, it should not be the initial examination to screen patients with CIVO.

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