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Veins and Lymphatics Varicose veins Phlebothrombosis or

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Title: Veins and Lymphatics Varicose veins Phlebothrombosis or


1
Veins and Lymphatics
  • Varicose veins
  • Phlebothrombosis or Thrombophlebitis

2
VARICOSE VEINS
  • Abnormally dilated, tortuous veins produced by
    prolonged, increased intraluminal pressure and
    loss of vessel wall support
  • Main sites superficial veins of the upper and
    lower leg
  • At risk
  • Occupations WITH PROLONED STANDING
  • simple orthostatic edema
  • gt50 years old, obese
  • Women (pregnancy)
  • familial tendency -defective venous wall
    development
  • 15 to 20 of the general population

3
VARICOSE VEINS
4
VARICOSE VEINSMorphology
  • Thrombosis
  • Valvular deformities
  • Microscopically
  • Thickness of the vein
  • Dilation hypertrophy of the smooth muscle and
    subintimal fibrosis
  • Spotty calcifications media (phlebosclerosis)
  • Elastic tissue degeneration

5
VARICOSE VEINS Clinical Course
  • venous stasis, congestion, edema, pain, and
    thrombosis
  • Sequelae
  • Persistent edema
  • Trophic changes in the skin
  • dermatitis, ulcerations
  • poorly healing wounds
  • infections
  • varicose ulcers
  • Embolism is very rare

6
VARICOSE VEINS Clinical Course
  • Esophageal Varices
  • Cirrhosis of the liver and its attendant portal
    hypertension
  • Massive upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage
  • Hemorrhoids
  • Hemorrhoidal plexus of veins at the anorectal
    junction
  • Pregnancies
  • Straining at stools

7
THROMBOPHLEBITIS AND PHLEBOTHROMBOSIS
  • Deep leg veins- 90 of cases of thrombophlebitis
  • Important clinical predispositions
  • Cardiac failure
  • neoplasia
  • pregnancy
  • Obesity
  • postoperative state
  • prolonged bed rest or immobilization
  • Genetic hypercoagulability

8
THROMBOPHLEBITIS AND PHLEBOTHROMBOSIS
  • Migratory thrombophlebitis (Trousseau syndrome)
  • Adenocarcinomas of the pancreas, colon, or lung
  • Hypercoagulability
  • paraneoplastic syndrome
  • Periprostatic venous plexus in the male
  • Pelvic veins in the female
  • Veins in the skull and the dural sinuses by
    bacterial infections of the meninges

9
THROMBOPHLEBITIS AND PHLEBOTHROMBOSIS
  • Early stages
  • Edema distal to the occluded vein
  • Dusky cyanosis
  • dilatation of superficial veins, heat,
    tenderness, redness, swelling, and pain
  • Homan sign
  • Pain over affected veins on squeezing the calf
    muscles or forced dorsi -flexion of the foot

10
Cinical sequel
  • Pulmonary embolism
  • common and serious clinical sequel
  • Sometimes - first manifestation of
    thrombophlebitis

11
PHLEBOTHROMBOSIS Plegmasia alba dolens
  • Plegmasia alba dolens (painful white leg or milk
    leg)
  • Pregnant women prior to or following delivery
  • Iliofemoral venous thrombosis
  • Initiators of phlebitis
  • pressure of the gravid uterus
  • Hypercoagulable state during pregnancy

12
VENA CAVAL SYNDROMES
  • Superior vena caval syndrome -SVC
  • Primary bronchogenic carcinoma or mediastinal
    lymphoma
  • Dusky cyanosis
  • Respiratory distress
  • Dilation of the veins of the head, neck, and arms

13
Inferior vena caval syndrome
  • Hepatocellular carcinoma and Renal cell carcinoma
  • edema of the legs
  • massive proteinuria
  • distention of the superficial collateral veins of
    the lower abdomen

14
LYMPHANGITIS AND LYMPHEDEMA
  • Most common- Bacterial infections
  • Group A beta-hemolytic streptococci
  • Lymphangitis
  • Acute lymphadenitis

15
Obstructive lymphedema
  • CAUSES
  • Spread of malignant tumors
  • Radical surgical procedures
  • Flariasis
  • Post inflammatory thrombosis
  • Post irradiation fibrosis
  • Rupture of obstructed, dilated lymphatics
  • Chylous ascites, chylothorax, and chylopericardium

16
Primary Lymphedema
  • Simple congenital Lymphedema
  • Familial Milroy disease (heredofamilial
    congenital lymphedema)
  • Lymphedema praecox

17
Primary LymphedemaClinical features
  • Age -10 and 25 years
  • Sex- females
  • Cause - unknown cause
  • Edema - begins in the feet
  • Complications
  • Disability (due to size of the limb)
  • peau d'orange" appearance of the skin
  • superimposed infection
  • chronic ulcerations

18
Raynaud phenomenon
  • Definition
  • paroxysmal pallor or cyanosis
  • Sites
  • Common - digits of the hands or feet
  • Uncommon - tips of the nose or ears
  • Mechanism
  • vasoconstriction
  • exaggeration of normal central and local
    vasomotor responses
  • Stimuli
  • Cold
  • Emotions
  • Vessels involved
  • digital arteries
  • precapillary arterioles
  • cutaneous arteriovenous shunts

19
Raynaud phenomenon
  • Color changes
  • white-blue-red
  • prevalence
  • 3-5 of population
  • Median age 14 yrs
  • Family history 25 of patients
  • Clinical Course
  • Benign
  • On long standing (due to intimal thickening)
  • Atrophy
  • Skin
  • Subcutaneous tissue
  • Muscles

20
Raynaud phenomenon
Types
  • Primary
  • Uncomplicated
  • Age -14 yrs
  • Mid or Benign
  • No other features
  • Secondary
  • Due to SLE, SS, AS, Buerger's Disease
  • gt30 yrs
  • Severe episodes
  • Skin changes other features

21
Pathology of Vascular Interventions
22
Balloon Angioplasty
  • Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
    PTCA
  • Mechanism of luminal expansion
  • plaque rupture
  • medial dissection
  • stretching of the media of the dissected segment
  • Results
  • short-term
  • Abrupt reclosure
  • long-term
  • proliferative restenosis

23
Stent
  • Technique
  • expandable tubes of metallic mesh
  • at sites of balloon angioplasty
  • Advantages
  • acting as a scaffold
  • increase blood flow
  • prevent vascular spasm
  • limit elastic recoil
  • Disadvantages
  • Early Thrombosis
  • Late - in- stent restenosis (the major
    limitation)
  • Rx - irradiation or antiproliferative drugs

24
VASCULAR REPLACEMENT
  • Grafts
  • synthetic or autologous
  • replace a segment of vessel or bypass

25
VASCULAR REPLACEMENT
  • Types
  • Large-diameter -Dacron grafts
  • high-flow locations (aorta)
  • small-diameter
  • most widely used small vessel replacements
  • autologous saphenous vein
  • fabric vascular grafts (polytetrafluoroethylene )
  • For periphery or coronary artery bypass

26
VASCULAR REPLACEMENT
  • Failure
  • Common cause
  • thrombotic occlusion
  • intimal fibrous hyperplasia
  • Occasionally
  • atherosclerosis
  • Healing of a vascular graft depends on
    endothelialization

27
Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgerygrafts
Patency at 10 years
  • Reversed autologous saphenous vein
  • 50
  • Internal mammary artery
  • 90

28
Trousseau
Sign or syndrome ?
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