Sunday, 28 August 2016

Venous Pump of the Lower Limb-Varicose Veins

Venous Pump of the Lower Limb
Within the closed fascial compartments of the lower limb, the thinwalled, valved venae comitantes are subjected to intermittent pressure at rest and during exercise. The pulsations of the adjacent arteries help move the blood up the limb. However, the contractions of the large muscles within the compartments during exercise compress these deeply placed veins and force the blood up the limb.
The superficial saphenous veins, except near their termination, lie within the superficial fascia and are not subject to these compression forces. The valves in the perforating veins prevent the high-pressure venous blood from being forced outward into the low-pressure superficial veins. Moreover, as the muscles within the closed fascial compartments relax, venous blood is sucked from the superficial into the deep veins.

Varicose Veins
A varicosed vein is one that has a larger diameter than normal and is elongated and tortuous. Varicosity of the esophageal and rectal veins is described elsewhere.
This condition commonly occurs in the superficial veins of the lower limb and, although not life threatening, is responsible for considerable discomfort and pain.
Varicosed veins have many causes, including hereditary weakness of the vein walls and incompetent valves; elevated intraabdominal pressure as a result of multiple pregnancies or abdominal tumors; and thrombophlebitis of the deep veins, which results in the superficial veins becoming the main venous pathway for the lower limb. It is easy to understand how this condition can be produced by incompetence of a valve in a perforating vein. Every time the patient exercises, high-pressure venous blood escapes from the deep veins into the superficial veins and produces a varicosity, which might be localized to begin with but becomes more extensive later. The successful operative treatment of varicosed veins depends on the ligation and division of all the main tributaries of the great or small saphenous veins, to prevent a collateral venous circulation from developing, and the ligation and division of all the perforating veins responsible for the leakage of highpressure blood from the deep to the superficial veins. It is now common practice to remove or strip the superficial veins in addition.
Needless to say, it is imperative to ascertain that the deep veins are patent before operative measures are taken.















1 comment: