Venous leg symptoms in healthy subjects assessed during prolonged standing
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文摘
The core symptoms of venous disease include leg discomfort or pain accompanied by sensations of heavy, weighty, or swollen legs. This suggests the presence of a cause and effect relationship between swelling and pain, resulting in the assumption that a venous disorder is responsible. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between leg volume increase and symptoms provoked by a period of stationary standing and also to investigate the effect of medical compression stockings (MCS).

Methods

Healthy volunteers were subject to stationary standing. Lower leg volume and the intensity and nature of the emerging symptoms were assessed seven times during 10 minutes.

Results

Of 46 subjects analyzed after an initial test with bare legs, 18 (39%) developed no or few symptoms (≤2 on a Numeric Rating Scale [NRS] of 0 to 10). However, their leg volume increased as much as in the 28 subjects who experienced more symptoms. Oligosymptomatic subjects scored lower in a baseline questionnaire on leg symptoms of somatic and psychic origin than did volunteers with more symptoms. The oligosymptomatic subjects were excluded from the tests with MCS. In the 24 subjects who completed the whole study, the lower leg volume increased in two phases, reaching an increment of 44 mL (standard deviation [SD], 18) or 1.73% (SD, 0.65) after 10 minutes. Symptoms emerged and increased in a linear fashion, reaching a mean score of 2.93 NRS points (SD, 1.52) at 10 minutes. The most prominent symptom was tingling (NRS, 5.07; SD, 3.05), followed by feelings of pressure and tension (NRS, 2.17; SD, 1.87). No correlation was found between volume increase and symptoms. MCS exerting an ankle pressure of 10 to 15 mm Hg reduced the volume increase to 32 mL (SD, 20), and MCS exerting 23 to 32 mm Hg reduced it to 24 mL (SD, 20; both P < .001; difference between stockings, P = .06). Symptom intensity was reduced to NRS 2.06 (SD, 1.52) and 2.21 (SD, 1.23; both P < .001), respectively. Both MCS reduced the symptoms equally (P = .38). Symptom reduction was not correlated with the prevention of volume increase.

Conclusions

On prolonged stationary standing, leg volume increase and symptoms occur independently. MCS reduce volume increase according to the pressure they exert. Symptoms are reduced independent of the pressure exerted and the volume increase prevented. This suggests that MCS act in more ways than by a simple reduction in volume.

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