Venous Disease Flashcards
anatomy of the veins
*thin walled vessels
*three histologic layers
*interconnected deep and superficial systems, connected by perforators
*UNIDIRECTIONAL VALVES
normal venous function
*low pressure, high volume
*flow:
-PHASIC (with VENTILATORY cycle, not cardiac cycle)
-driven by leg muscles and thoracic pressure
-valves are CRITICAL to maintaining normal pressures in legs [loss of valve function leads to ambulatory venous hypertension]
DVT - etiologies
*Virchow’s Triad: problems with:
1. venous flow: stasis from “pump failure” - usually due to immobilization or venous obstruction
2. venous blood: hypercoagulability states
3. luminal interface: physical damage exposing pro-coagulant media or luminal upregulation of procoagulant ICAMs
DVT - clinical presentation
*leg swelling
*leg pain
*pulmonary embolization symptoms
*paradoxical embolization
*cellulitis-type presentation
*abdominal pain
DVT - diagnosis
*DUPLEX ULTRASOUND (gold standard for extremities)
*CT scan (standard for portal/mesenteric)
*lab tests: D-dimer
DVT treatment
- ANTICOAGULATION - prevent PE or propagation; promote recanalization
- graded compression - minimize/prevent post-thrombotic syndrome sequelae
post-thrombotic syndrome - overview
*a syndrome that develops after significant, extensive DVTs that affect the iliac veins, causing chronic, severe swelling
*due to the effects of ambulatory venous hypertension
*valve failure
*persisting obstruction (resultant hypertension and distension exacerbates valve issues)
post-thrombotic syndrome - clinical presentation
*leg swelling (chronic)
*stasis dermatitis (brownish, thickened skin around ankles - gaiter distribution)
*recurrent cellulitis
*stasis ulcers (gaiter distribution; usually not painful)
post-thrombotic syndrome - treatment
*graded compression therapy
*wound care
varicose veins - risk factors
*family history
*prior DVT
*prior pregnancy
*female gender
varicose veins - presentation
GRADIENT of severity:
*cosmetic issues
*pain (exacerbated by prolonged standing)
*bleeding
*thrombosis
*ulcer development