Neovascularisation is not an Innocent Bystander in Recurrence after Great Saphenous Vein Surgery |
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Authors: | CRR Corbett V Prakash |
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Affiliation: | Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, UK |
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Abstract: | IntroductionThis study sought to establish the causes of failure of great saphenous vein surgery among patients in whom there was confidence that accurate saphenofemoral ligation had been carried and the great saphenous vein had been stripped at least to knee level.MethodsThis was an observational study of 100 limbs (66 patients) operated on by a single surgeon 5–22 years previously (mean: 12 years). The index operation was primary in 54 limbs and for recurrence in 46 limbs. Thirty-two patients were studied having been re-referred for recurrence while 34 were recalled for review. All were examined clinically and with duplex ultrasonography, and all completed questionnaires (Aberdeen varicose vein questionnaire [AVVQ] and EQ-5D-3L). In order to measure the extent of visible recurrence, a scoring system similar to that in the venous clinical severity score was used but with a range of 0–8.ResultsThere were visible varicosities in 77 of the 100 limbs. Duplex ultrasonography showed that recurrent saphenofemoral incompetence (SFI) was present in 27% of the limbs. This was judged to result from neovascularisation and was the most common source of reflux. AVVQ scores for the 27 limbs with recurrent SFI (median: 34, interquartile range [IQR]: 20–42) were higher than for the 73 with no recurrent SFI (median: 17, IQR: 11–29), which was a significant difference (Mann–Whitney U test, p<0.01). Analysing clinical scores with chi-squared tests indicated fewer visible varicosities in limbs without recurrent SFI than in those with recurrent SFI (p<0.01).ConclusionsNeovascularisation remains poorly understood but it cannot be considered an innocent bystander. |
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Keywords: | Great saphenous vein Varicose vein surgery Recurrent varicose veins |
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