Ambulatory venous pressure, air plethysmography, and the role of calf venous pump in chronic venous disease.


Journal

Journal of vascular surgery. Venous and lymphatic disorders
ISSN: 2213-3348
Titre abrégé: J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101607771

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
May 2019
Historique:
received: 13 02 2018
accepted: 29 08 2018
entrez: 20 4 2019
pubmed: 20 4 2019
medline: 10 3 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Ambulatory venous pressure (AMVP) records pressure dynamics with calf exercise. Air plethysmography (APG) measures related volume detail. APG has been suggested as a noninvasive surrogate for AMVP. We examine the correlations between APG and AMVP parameters and the role of "calf pump failure" in chronic venous disease (CVD). A total of 8456 limbs in 4610 patients investigated for CVD during a 20-year period were analyzed. APG and AMVP data were available in 4599 limbs for calculation of Pearson correlation coefficient; 1347 of these limbs had significant iliac vein stenosis, proven by intravascular ultrasound. Venn diagrams are used to explore overlapping incidence of APG and AMVP abnormalities. APG calf volume and reflux (venous volume, venous filling index) showed progressively significant deterioration with advancing Clinical, Etiology, Anatomy, and Pathophysiology (CEAP) clinical class, anatomic extent of reflux (superficial, deep, perforator), and reflux severity (axial reflux, segmental score). Notably, calf ejection volume increased in a nearly linear fashion (R = 0.71) to venous volume such that residual volume fraction (RVF) remained normal even in the worst of these categories. AMVP too progressively deteriorated with clinical disease and reflux severity. Venous filling time was the key parameter as the pressure drop alone was abnormal in only 4% of the limbs analyzed. There was no correlation between RVF and AMVP (R = 0.22) or between AMVP and many other APG parameters. Venn distribution showed only minor overlap (30%) between AMVP and key APG abnormalities overall, but the overlap increases from 40% to 70% in advanced clinical and reflux categories. AMVP was rarely abnormal (7%) when APG was normal. Median AMVP was normal in calf pump failure categories, however defined (subnormal ejection fraction, RVF, or both). Median AMVP is normal in venous obstruction without reflux, while AMVP abnormalities are associated three to seven times more with reflux than with obstruction. APG (venous filling index) is a useful index of reflux. Calf pump ejection is a powerful and plastic compensatory mechanism, and calf pump failure is rare. Ambulatory venous hypertension is dominantly associated with reflux and less with obstruction. AMVP too worsens with clinical and reflux severity categories. However, there is little correlation between APG and AMVP parameters as APG measures volume and AMVP measures pressure, each in its own domain, and the volume-pressure curve is nonlinear. AMVP may be omitted in routine clinical testing if APG is normal, as the yield (7%) will be very low. AMVP reflects venous hypertension, the end stage in CVD. AMVP should be used to identify such cases when APG is abnormal.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Ambulatory venous pressure (AMVP) records pressure dynamics with calf exercise. Air plethysmography (APG) measures related volume detail. APG has been suggested as a noninvasive surrogate for AMVP. We examine the correlations between APG and AMVP parameters and the role of "calf pump failure" in chronic venous disease (CVD).
METHODS METHODS
A total of 8456 limbs in 4610 patients investigated for CVD during a 20-year period were analyzed. APG and AMVP data were available in 4599 limbs for calculation of Pearson correlation coefficient; 1347 of these limbs had significant iliac vein stenosis, proven by intravascular ultrasound. Venn diagrams are used to explore overlapping incidence of APG and AMVP abnormalities.
RESULTS RESULTS
APG calf volume and reflux (venous volume, venous filling index) showed progressively significant deterioration with advancing Clinical, Etiology, Anatomy, and Pathophysiology (CEAP) clinical class, anatomic extent of reflux (superficial, deep, perforator), and reflux severity (axial reflux, segmental score). Notably, calf ejection volume increased in a nearly linear fashion (R = 0.71) to venous volume such that residual volume fraction (RVF) remained normal even in the worst of these categories. AMVP too progressively deteriorated with clinical disease and reflux severity. Venous filling time was the key parameter as the pressure drop alone was abnormal in only 4% of the limbs analyzed. There was no correlation between RVF and AMVP (R = 0.22) or between AMVP and many other APG parameters. Venn distribution showed only minor overlap (30%) between AMVP and key APG abnormalities overall, but the overlap increases from 40% to 70% in advanced clinical and reflux categories. AMVP was rarely abnormal (7%) when APG was normal. Median AMVP was normal in calf pump failure categories, however defined (subnormal ejection fraction, RVF, or both). Median AMVP is normal in venous obstruction without reflux, while AMVP abnormalities are associated three to seven times more with reflux than with obstruction.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
APG (venous filling index) is a useful index of reflux. Calf pump ejection is a powerful and plastic compensatory mechanism, and calf pump failure is rare. Ambulatory venous hypertension is dominantly associated with reflux and less with obstruction. AMVP too worsens with clinical and reflux severity categories. However, there is little correlation between APG and AMVP parameters as APG measures volume and AMVP measures pressure, each in its own domain, and the volume-pressure curve is nonlinear. AMVP may be omitted in routine clinical testing if APG is normal, as the yield (7%) will be very low. AMVP reflects venous hypertension, the end stage in CVD. AMVP should be used to identify such cases when APG is abnormal.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31000064
pii: S2213-333X(18)30406-2
doi: 10.1016/j.jvsv.2018.08.009
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

428-440

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Seshadri Raju (S)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss. Electronic address: rajumd@earthlink.net.

Jordan Knepper (J)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss.

Corbin May (C)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss.

Alexander Knight (A)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss.

Nicholas Pace (N)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss.

Arjun Jayaraj (A)

The Rane Center at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Miss.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH