Abstract

Initial and sustained (7-h) impacts of foot-to-knee compression bandaging on leg arterial pulsatile blood flow were assessed by nuclear magnetic resonance flowmetry in eight healthy supine subjects. A widely used bandaging method (zinc impregnated gauze + Coban) and a slight variant (Coban only) were applied one week apart to one leg. Blood flow was measured on each day of bandage application before and after bandaging and after 7 h of normal activity. Initial mean sub-bandage pressures (lateral gaiter) were between 28.4 and 28.9 mmHg but were significantly reduced after 7 h to 16.3-19.4 mmHg. Overall below-knee pulsatile blood perfusion was initially significantly increased by both methods mainly due to increased proximal blood flow. Bandaging was also associated with a decrease in blood perfusion of the nonbandaged control leg mainly due to a decrease in distal blood flow. Neither of these effects were sustained after 7 h. The fact that neither sub-bandage pressure nor blood flow was sustained may indicate a causal linkage, a concept consistent with the finding of a linear relationship between afternoon blood flow and sub-bandage pressure reductions. The implications of the present findings for venous ulcer therapy are speculative and based on the concept that arterial pulsatile flow augmentation is a positive feature. If so, more frequent bandage changes to provide transient flow stimulation or use of bandages to better maintain sub-bandage pressure to sustain flow increases may be useful.

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