Vol. 4, Issue 3, Part C (2020)

Comparison of pain in two methods of varicose vein surgery

Author(s):

Dr. G Chandrashekar Naik and Dr. KC Chandrashekaraiah

Abstract:
Lower limb DVT is a common clinical entity and a clear history of DVT is found in about 20% of patients with CVU. In addition, an unknown and probably unquantifiable number of people develop asymptomatic DVT without ever knowing it. The presence of thrombus within a vein, especially where it is occlusive, leads to an inflammatory, possibly Ischaemic phlebitis. This is thought to be due to obstruction of the vena venorum and direct humoral and/or cellular damage to the endothelium. Patients presenting to hospital medical college and research institute with varicose vein to undergo surgery for varicose vein. Each patient with a typical history of symptomatic varicosis will be subjected to physical examination and preliminary investigations. Pain at 24 hours measured by visual analog scale (0: No distress, 10: Agonizing) is significantly more associated with conventional with P<0.001.

Pages: 171-174  |  1864 Views  807 Downloads



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How to cite this article:
Dr. G Chandrashekar Naik and Dr. KC Chandrashekaraiah. Comparison of pain in two methods of varicose vein surgery. Int. J. Surg. Sci. 2020;4(3):171-174. DOI: https://doi.org/10.33545/surgery.2020.v4.i3c.489