Abstract

The aim of this study was to demonstrate the effects of compression following the endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) of incompetent great saphenous veins (GSVs) using a 1470 nm diode laser (Ceralas E 1470 nm, biolitec) and a 2ring radial fiber (ELVeS Radial 2ring™, biolitec). In this single-center prospective study, 150 legs of 150 consecutive patients were randomly allocated to one of three groups (A, B, and C). Group A patients did not undergo postoperative compression. Group B patients wore a thigh-length graduated compression stocking (23–32 mmHg) for 7 days, whereas group C patients wore the same stocking for 28 days. No additional phlebectomies or sclerotherapies were performed. Investigations were performed prior to intervention, at the day of intervention (D0), at day 7 (D7), and at day 28 post intervention (D28). The primary endpoint was post-interventional pain measured on a 10-point scale. A significant but small pain decrease was observed in the first week of compression, by comparing group B’s mean pain scores to those of group A (p = 0.009). Wearing a compression stocking after EVLA reduced pain within the first week on a significant, but low level. Taking the very low differences in pain levels into account, the difference may not be clinically relevant and post-treatment compression may not be necessary if no additional phlebectomies or sclerotherapies are performed.

Highlights

  • Endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) is an effective method of treating incompetent great saphenous veins (GSV) [1,2,3], with occlusion rates demonstrated to reach approximately 95% after five years [4]

  • Recent studies demonstrated that the main effect of compression following

  • Two-sided t-tests were used to test the hypothesis that differences will occur between the treatment groups. p-values below 5% were considered significant

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Summary

Introduction

Endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) is an effective method of treating incompetent great saphenous veins (GSV) [1,2,3], with occlusion rates demonstrated to reach approximately 95% after five years [4]. GSV interventions is pain reduction within the first 7 days after treatment [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15] In most of these studies, additional phlebectomies were performed. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the outcomes and side effects of compression therapy four weeks after EVLA of the GSV using a 1470 nm diode laser (Ceralas E 1470 nm, biolitec) and a 2ring radial fiber (ELVeS Radial 2ringTM, biolitec) with and without compression stockings. No additional phlebectomies or sclerotherapy of varicose veins were performed

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