2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2006.06.007
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Comparison of new continuous measurements of ambulatory venous pressure (AVP) with conventional tiptoe exercise ambulatory AVP in relation to the CEAP clinical classification of chronic venous disease

Abstract: In the assessment of CVI, mean walking pressure and percent fall in walking pressure are more reliably associated with anatomic distribution of reflux and clinical severity of CVI than the gold standard investigations of conventional AVP and RT90.

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…In a group of CVI participants, AVP decreased by approximately 75% at the end of ten tiptoe exercise compared to basal values, with no differences in the magnitude of AVP decrease between people with different CVI severities [80]. However, compared to healthy groups (CEAP C0 class), CVI groups show a percentage AVP decrease that on average is only approximately 35% in CEAP classes C4…C5, a value that is half of that for participants in C0 class [79]. Surely, the percentage AVP decrease plus the basal venous hydrostatic pressure at foot level determine the ambulatory drop in hydrostatic pressure in dorsal foot veins.…”
Section: Muscle Pump Function and Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 83%
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“…In a group of CVI participants, AVP decreased by approximately 75% at the end of ten tiptoe exercise compared to basal values, with no differences in the magnitude of AVP decrease between people with different CVI severities [80]. However, compared to healthy groups (CEAP C0 class), CVI groups show a percentage AVP decrease that on average is only approximately 35% in CEAP classes C4…C5, a value that is half of that for participants in C0 class [79]. Surely, the percentage AVP decrease plus the basal venous hydrostatic pressure at foot level determine the ambulatory drop in hydrostatic pressure in dorsal foot veins.…”
Section: Muscle Pump Function and Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Surely, the percentage AVP decrease plus the basal venous hydrostatic pressure at foot level determine the ambulatory drop in hydrostatic pressure in dorsal foot veins. In healthy people, the large percentage fall in AVP combines with normal basal hydrostatic venous pressure, so that in such cases mean AVP lowers to around 30 mmHg, contrasting with mean AVP values >55 mmHg in C4-C6 clinical groups [79]. The AVP pressure has a fairly good relationship with venous incompetence, with the risk of ulceration increasing linearly with ambulatory venous hypertension.…”
Section: Muscle Pump Function and Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Os diâmetros venosos estão fortemente relacionados com as insuficiências do sistema venoso periférico, como a insuficiência venosa crónica (IVC). A dilatação de um vaso sanguí-neo pode provocar o refluxo venoso e, consequentemente, um aumento na pressão venosa local, especialmente nos membros inferiores (Eifell, Ashour, & Lees, 2006), onde devido à ação da força da gravidade, necessita de maior bombeamento para o seu trajeto ascendente ao átrio direito (Padberg et al, 2004).…”
Section: Resultsunclassified
“…Esta melhoria já foi observada em pacientes com trombose venosa profunda com o exercício de caminhada em tapete rolante e, igualmente, observado uma diminuição, significativa, do volume do membro afetado (Kahn et al, 2003). O IVC é uma patologia multifatorial, contudo a exposição prolongada do vaso a elevadas pressões venosas parece ser um dos aspetos mais importantes no processo de desenvolvimento da doença (Eifell et al, 2006). O efeito hipotensivo após exercício aeróbio (Casonatto & Polito, 2009) e de treino de força (Rodrigues-da-Silva, Lima, Rodrigues, Júnior, & Ritti-Dias, 2013) pode ter neste aspeto um papel importante, podendo ser uma das razões dos resultados observados no presente estudo.…”
Section: Resultsunclassified