Venous Insufficiency Flashcards
What does the acronym “PVD” stand for?
Peripheral Vascular Disease
What type of vessels can be affected by a peripheral vascular disease?
- Arterial
- Venous
- Lymphatic
What health history is usually associated with venous insufficiency?
- Deep vein thrombosis
- Vein surgery
- Venous disease
- Leg trauma
- Failure of the calf-muscle pump
What lifestyle habits are usually associated with venous insufficiency?
- Sedentary
- Obesity
- Immobile / occupations which requires prolonged standing / sitting
What symptoms are usually associated with venous insufficiency?
- Dull, achy pain
- Lower leg edema
- Pulse present
- Drainage
- Sores with irregular borders
- Yellow slough
- Ruddy skin
What health history is usually associated with arterial insufficiency?
- Cardiovascular disease
- Stroke
- Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD)
- Advanced age
What lifestyle habits are usually associated with arterial insufficiency?
- Smoking
- Malnutrition / Obesity
What are symptoms associated with arterial insufficiency?
- Intermittent claudication pain
- No edema
- Absent/weak pulse
- No drainage
- Round, smooth sores
- Black eschar
What components are required for normal venous function?
- Competent valves
- Physical properties of the venous wall
- Functioning calf muscle pump
What condition often causes venous ulcers?
Chronic venous insufficiency (CVI)
or
Chronic venous disease (CVD)
What are the characteristics of wounds associated with CVD?
- Irregular sloping margins
- Devitalized tissue (yellow and pink-red [shallow fibrinous, granulating base])
- Variable size
- High exudate levels
- Painful, with pain relieved by elevation of the limb
During inspection, what are signs of CVI?
- Wound located in the gaiter region of the leg.
- Edema
- Varicosities (varicose veins, varicose eczema)
- Lipodermatosclerosis (inverted champagne bottle effect)
- Hemosiderin staining
- Hyperpigmentation
- Atrophie blanche
- Venous Dermatitis
What is the CEAP Classification tool?
Tool that ensures that chronic venous disorders are diagnosed, compared and reported in a universally uniform way.
Clinical
Etiological
Anatomical
Pathophysiological
What questions are associated with each letter of the CEAP tool?
CLINICAL: What symptoms are present?
ETIOLOGICAL: What’s the etiology of the CVI? Are causes congenital, primary (undetermined cause), or secondary (known cause).
ANATOMICAL: What veins are implicated (superficial, deep or perforating) and where?
PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL: What’s causing/contributing to the CVI? (Reflux, obstruction, or a combination of both)
What does the acronym “ABPI” stand for?
Ankle-Brachial Pressure Index