Birn Jeffrey, Vedantham Suresh
Interventional Radiology Section, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA.
Interventional Radiology Section, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
Vasc Med. 2015 Feb;20(1):74-83. doi: 10.1177/1358863X14560429. Epub 2014 Dec 10.
Acute and chronic venous disorders of the lower extremities affect millions of people and cause substantial disability. Long ago, surgeons and pathologists identified the presence of 'spur-like' abnormalities of the left common iliac vein; these abnormalities were hypothesized to result from compression and/or irritation from the adjacent crossing right common iliac artery. In the 1990s, physicians, starting to perform catheter-directed thrombolysis to treat extensive deep vein thrombosis (DVT), observed that about 50% of patients had an iliac vein stenosis. Vascular physicians have become aware of the occasional patient with otherwise-unexplained extremity swelling and/or pain but without a DVT history who is subsequently found to have an iliac vein abnormality. These 'lesions' have been hypothesized to elevate ambulatory venous pressures and thereby produce lower-extremity symptoms, increase the risk of initial and recurrent DVT episodes, and increase the risk of treatment failure with medical and endovascular therapies for thrombotic and non-thrombotic venous conditions. As a result, many practitioners now actively seek iliac venous obstructive 'lesions' when evaluating patients with known or suspected venous disease. However, for many patients, it continues to be unclear what degree of obstruction to venous blood flow is being caused by such lesions, how clinically significant they are, how much emphasis should be placed on identifying them, and when they should be treated. This article seeks to improve the knowledge base of vascular practitioners who make clinical decisions about the diagnosis and treatment of obstructive iliac vein lesions.
下肢急慢性静脉疾病影响着数百万人,并导致严重的残疾。很久以前,外科医生和病理学家就发现左髂总静脉存在“刺状”异常;据推测,这些异常是由相邻的右髂总动脉交叉压迫和/或刺激所致。在20世纪90年代,医生们开始进行导管定向溶栓治疗广泛的深静脉血栓形成(DVT),观察到约50%的患者存在髂静脉狭窄。血管科医生已经意识到,偶尔会有一些患者出现不明原因的肢体肿胀和/或疼痛,但没有DVT病史,随后发现存在髂静脉异常。据推测,这些“病变”会升高动态静脉压,从而产生下肢症状,增加初次和复发性DVT发作的风险,以及增加血栓性和非血栓性静脉疾病的药物和血管内治疗失败的风险。因此,现在许多从业者在评估已知或疑似静脉疾病的患者时,会积极寻找髂静脉阻塞性“病变”。然而,对于许多患者来说,这些病变导致静脉血流阻塞的程度、它们在临床上的重要性、在识别它们时应给予多大的重视以及何时应该治疗,仍然不清楚。本文旨在提高血管科从业者在对阻塞性髂静脉病变的诊断和治疗做出临床决策方面的知识基础。