View clinical trials related to Venous Insufficiency.
Filter by:This study is aimed at evaluation of diagnostic value of Doppler sonography, MR venography and air-plethysmography for the assessment of abnormalities in the internal jugular veins, with catheter venography as the reference test.
The purpose of this study is to prove the safety and efficacy of plasma as an add-on treatment in combination with conventional treatment in cases of chronical venous Ulcus cruris.
Elastic MCT is a widely recognized and the consensus-approved treatment for chronic venous insufficiency (CVI).Efficacy evidence level is often insufficient (grade B or C), or based on studies carried prior to CEAP classification (2004). Item C3 of this classification relates to patients suffering from chronic venous disease and permanent oedema. Literature mentions only one study in which volume reduction in venous-induced oedema was primary endpoint. Indeed, 240 patients showed a 46.7 ± 8.2 ml reduction (SEM) after 12 weeks with a Class 2 compression sock (15-20 mm Hg at ankle). Volume is an accurate and reproducible quantitative measure considered nowadays as being gold standard when objectifying oedema variation. It is therefore particularly relevant in a C3-patient trial (CEAP classification). The main objective of the current study is to evaluate the clinical effect of Progressiv' MCT on volume reduction in permanent CVI-oedema after 3 months of treatment.
The use of neuromuscular electrical stimulation in the treatment of venous ulcers with difficulty of repair could be an alternative therapeutic favoring devitalized tissues and hence the pain. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of neuromuscular electrical stimulation on pain and area of venous ulcers in patients with venous insufficiency.
To assess in a double blinded randomized control trial (RCT) study design safety and effectiveness of balloon angioplasty of the main extracranial and extravertebral veins in multiple sclerosis (MS) associated to chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI). Mean follow-up 1 year. 5-8 Italian centres 360 relapsing remitting (RR) MS patients will be randomized, with expanded disability disease scale (EDSS) ranging 2-5.5, age 18-65.
It is known that 33-50% of Classic and Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome patients eventually develop dysautonomia, otherwise known as "POTS" (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome). Some of these patients develop dysautonomia as a result of a retroflexed odontoid, Chiari 1 Malformation or cranial settling and the resulting basilar impression. Many Ehlers-Danlos patients suffer with the same symptomology with no evidence of a cause according to MRI imaging. It is the author's hypothesis that low-level External Communicating Hydrocephalus appears to be responsible for the constellation of autonomic and cranial nerve symptoms, and if present in the very young, an analysis of head circumference growth in the first 15 months of life should reflect abnormally rapid head growth, supporting this hypothesis.
The investigators propose that evidence of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) may be evident in the vasculature of the fundus. The investigators will be examining fundi of multiple sclerosis patients and Ehlers-Danlos patients to see if evidence of CCSVI can be found in these patients having high risk for CCSVI. The investigators will read the fundus photos, compared to age-matched normals in a "blind" fashion.
Randomized controlled trial, a method used to implement the random allocation sequence is numbered containers. The aim of the study is to compare operative treatment, ultrasound guided laser ablation and ultrasound guided foam sclerotherapy in occluding/ablating of insufficiency in great saphenous trunks. On the grounds of the available data, the study hypothesis is that using laser or operative treatment more than 20 percent better outcome can be achieved compared to foam sclerotherapy.
The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of endovascular treatment (balloon angioplasty and/or stenting) for the improvement of clinical symptoms in multiple sclerosis patients.
The purpose of this study is: -item one to use two new non-invasive technologies to evaluate scarring and swelling associated with chronic venous insufficiency. The study hypothesis: - item one non-invasive technologies can provide a tool for assessing risk of ulcer development based on the tissue edema and alteration.