The prevalence of elevated ABI in patients referred to vascular consultation is 8.4% and that of PAD among these 62.2%. PAD is significantly more probable among those with chronic renal failure, a history of smoking and coronary heart disease. Furthermore, the specificity of elevated ABI (>/=1.3) in recognizing PAD is good, whereas the sensitivity is only satisfactory.
BackgroundEndovenous ablation techniques and ultrasound‐guided foam sclerotherapy (UGFS) have largely replaced open surgery for treatment of great saphenous varicose veins. This was a randomized trial to compare the effect of surgery, endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) (with phlebectomies) and UGFS on quality of life and the occlusion rate of the great saphenous vein (GSV) 12 months after surgery.MethodsPatients with symptomatic, uncomplicated varicose veins (CEAP class C2–C4) were examined at baseline, 1 month and 1 year. Before discharge and at 1 week, patients reported a pain score on a visual analogue scale. Preoperative and 1‐year assessments included duplex ultrasound imaging and the Aberdeen Varicose Vein Severity Score (AVVSS).ResultsThe study included 214 patients: 65 had surgery, 73 had EVLA and 76 had UGFS. At 1 year, the GSV was occluded or absent in 59 (97 per cent) of 61 patients after surgery, 71 (97 per cent) of 73 after EVLA and 37 (51 per cent) of 72 after UGFS (P < 0·001). The AVVSS improved significantly in comparison with preoperative values in all groups, with no significant differences between them. Perioperative pain was significantly reduced and sick leave shorter after UGFS (mean 1 day) than after EVLA (8 days) and surgery (12 days).ConclusionIn comparison with open surgery and EVLA, UGFS resulted in equivalent improvement in quality of life but significantly higher residual GSV reflux at 12‐month follow‐up.
Sleep spindles are transient EEG waveforms of non‐rapid eye movement sleep. There is considerable intersubject variability in spindle amplitudes. The problem in automatic spindle detection has been that, despite this fact, a fixed amplitude threshold has been used. Selection of the spindle detection threshold value is critical with respect to the sensitivity of spindle detection. In this study a method was developed to estimate the optimal recording‐specific threshold value for each all‐night recording without any visual scorings. The performance of the proposed method was validated using four test recordings each having a very different number of visually scored spindles. The optimal threshold values for the test recordings could be estimated well. The presented method seems very promising in providing information about sleep spindle amplitudes of individual all‐night recordings.
In the present work, gender differences in sleep spindle topography were examined in 40 subjects. Their median age was 32 years (range 22–49 years). Spindles were detected from 3,306,060 s of visually scored stage 2 sleep EEG by a previously validated automatic fuzzy detector at 1-second intervals. A total of 271,168 spindles were found from the six EEG channels analyzed. Females showed a significantly higher percentage of spindles in the left frontal channel than males (Fp1-A2; p = 0.026). To confirm that this difference was gender and not age related, the subjects were divided into two age groups. No significant differences in spindle activity of the frontal channels were found between the groups. However, the interindividual spindle variability seemed to be at least as large as that stemming from gender.
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