dinsdag 25 oktober 2011

Een stap vooruit in de behandeling van MS

Antibody offers hope for multiple sclerosis treatment

Promising phase III trial paves the way for alemtuzumab approval.

The first drug to show signs of not just halting multiple sclerosis (MS), but actually reversing the nerve damage caused by the condition, has taken a significant step towards clinical approval.
The results of a phase III trial, presented on 22 October at the 5th Joint Triennial Congress of the European and Americas Committees for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis, in Amsterdam, found that 78% of patients treated with the monoclonal antibody alemtuzumab remained free from relapse after two years — and half the relapse rate of one of the standard therapies, interferon β-1a (marketed as Rebif, among other names).

However, alemtuzumab did not perform quite as well as it had in earlier trials. There was some evidence that it had reversed damage to nerves, but the result was not statistically significant, says Alasdair Coles, a neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge, UK, and the UK chief investigator of the Comparison of Alemtuzumab and Rebif Efficacy in Multiple Sclerosis (CARE-MS) I trial.
Coles told the meeting that magnetic resonance imaging showed that subjects taking alemtuzumab had also lost less brain volume than those taking Rebif, a proxy measure for overall tissue damage. "Alemtuzumab has eliminated the loss of brain tissue," he says.
Just 8% of patients taking alemtuzumab experienced a worsening in disability according to standard measures, in comparison with 11% taking Rebif. There was no statistical difference between the two groups, but Coles puts this down to Rebif performing better than expected. "The patients recruited in this trial showed very little worsening of disability," he says.

Significant promise?

Ludwig Kappos, chair of neurology at the University Hospital of Basel in Switzerland, who has been involved in several MS drug trials, says he is disappointed that there was no significant effect on disability progression. "This is in contrast to what the phase II study has shown," he says. But he expects this effect to show up in another ongoing phase III trial: CARE-MS II, the preliminary results of which should be available later this year.
There is no cure for MS, a condition caused by the body's own immune system attacking the myelin sheath that normally protects the nerves and speeds up neurological signals in the brain and spinal cord. At the moment, the only treatments are drugs such as interferon β-1a and glatiramer acetate (Copaxone), both of which merely slow the progression of the disease.
But alemtuzumab has the potential to reverse it: the drug tackles the mechanisms that cause damage to cells by effectively resetting the immune system. It targets the CD52 glycoproteins on the surface of mature immune cells, or lymphocytes, depleting levels of the aggressive T and B cells without affecting other lymphocytes. For reasons still not quite understood, when the lymphocytes repopulate, those involved in attacking the myelin sheath seem less likely to recover..

Immune response

Although the efficacy of alemtuzumab is impressive, performance was never really the issue, says Les Funtleyder, a health-care strategist at trading firm Miller Tabak + Co in New York. "With alemtuzumab the issue is safety," he says.
The drug brings an increased risk of autoimmune diseases. In the trial, 18.1% of people taking alemtuzumab experienced thyroid-related autoimmune responses, and 0.8% developed the potentially life-threatening condition immune thrombocytopenia. But, says Coles, these findings mirror those from earlier trials, and it is possible to identify those patients most at risk by screening for certain biomarkers. "What's reassuring with this trial is that there are no new safety issues," he says.
Some patients and clinicians who have already got wind of the alemtuzumab's efficacy seem unwilling to wait for clinical approval, says Coles. The drug is already approved in many countries as a treatment for some forms of leukaemia and lymphoma, under the name Campath. In some countries, including the United Kingdom, it is legal to prescribe any drug for off-label use, and so patients have already started using it to treat MS, he says.
But it is not just MS patients who have been holding their breath over this drug, says Funtleyder. Earlier this year, Genzyme, a drug company based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that makes alemtuzumab and a range of other therapies, was acquired by Paris-based drug-maker Sanofi. The value of the deal for Genzyme's shareholders is contingent on the success of alemtuzumab in treating MS; the first milestone is for the drug to gain approval from the US Food and Drug Administration before the end of March 2014.

http://www.nature.com/news/2011/111024/full/news.2011.609.html

maandag 24 oktober 2011

Eenn stap vooruit in de behandeling van Long Kanker

Lung cancer vaccine shows promise


Lung cancer 

A vaccine which triggers the immune system to attack the most common type of lung cancer has shown promise in early clinical trials, say researchers.

Tests on 148 patients, reported in the Lancet Oncology, showed that adding the vaccine to chemotherapy slowed the cancer's progression.

However, its effect on overall survival was limited and further trials are now needed.

Cancer Research UK said there were many unanswered questions.

Vaccines for cancer use the same principles as vaccines against infection - training the body's own immune system. However, instead of protecting against measles or seasonal flu, these vaccines attack tumours growing in the body.

The idea is that when a cell becomes cancerous and divides uncontrollably, its starts to look different. Proteins on the surface of the cells change and the immune system can be trained to spot these changes.

Targeted:
Researchers at the University of Strasbourg used a vaccine called TG4010. It is a modified pox virus, distantly related to smallpox, which has been genetically modified to make a "cancerous" surface protein.

Patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer took part in the trial. All were given standard chemotherapy treatment, half were also infected with the virus.

Six months later, the illness was more likely to be stable in vaccinated patients than in those just taking chemotherapy drugs. Six month "progression free survival" was 43% for vaccinated patients and 35% for those on chemotherapy.

However average survival was 10.7 months in vaccinated patients, only marginally higher than the 10.3 months in chemotherapy patients.

Prof Peter Johnson, chief clinician at Cancer Research UK, said: "There's a lot of interest in harnessing the power of the immune system to treat cancer. This early-stage study shows that combining a vaccine with chemotherapy is possible, and may have some benefits for some people with lung cancer.

"But this study leaves a lot of unanswered questions - further research is needed to see whether the vaccine will actually improve survival for lung cancer patients."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-15401739

vrijdag 2 september 2011

New Cancer Treatment

'New anti-cancer virus' shows potentials in Anti-Cancer Treatment


An engineered virus, injected into the blood, can selectively target cancer cells throughout the body in what researchers have labeled a medical first.
The virus attacked only tumors, leaving the healthy tissue alone, in a small trial on 23 patients, according to the journal Nature.Researchers said the findings could one day "truly transform" therapies.Cancer specialists said using viruses showed "real promise".

Using viruses to attack cancers is not a new concept, but they have needed to be injected directly into tumors in order to evade the immune system.

Smallpox to cancer
Scientists modified the vaccinia virus, which is more famous for being used to develop a smallpox vaccine.
The virus, named JX-594, is dependent upon a chemical pathway, common in some cancers, in order to replicate.It was injected at different doses into the blood of 23 patients with cancers which had spread to multiple organs in the body.In the eight patients receiving the highest dose, seven had the virus replicating in their tumors, but not in healthy tissue.Prof John Bell, lead researcher and from the University of Ottawa, said: "We are very excited because this is the first time in medical history that a viral therapy has been shown to consistently and selectively replicate in cancer tissue after intravenous infusion in humans."Intravenous delivery is crucial for cancer treatment because it allows us to target tumors throughout the body as opposed to just those that we can directly inject." Infection prevented further tumor growth in six patients for a time. However, the virus did not cure cancer. Patients were given only one dose of the virus as the trial was designed to test the safety of the virus.It is thought that the virus could be used to deliver treatments directly to cancerous cells in high concentrations. Prof Bell acknowledges that the research is still in the very early stages, but he said: "I believe that someday, viruses and other biological therapies could truly transform our approach for treating cancer."
Cancer Research UK's Prof Nick Lemoine, also director of Barts Cancer Institute, said: "Viruses that multiply in just tumor cells - avoiding healthy cells - are showing real promise as a new biological approach to target hard-to-treat cancers.
"This new study is important because it shows that a virus previously used safely to vaccinate against smallpox in millions of people can now be modified to reach cancers through the bloodstream - even after cancer has spread widely through the patient's body.
"It is particularly encouraging that responses were seen even in tumors like mesothelioma, a cancer which can be particularly hard to treat."


A Major step forward in the treatment of Cancer

Dr. Harry Spoelstra MD. 



zondag 24 juli 2011

Facebook

  FACEBOOK use leads to Healthcare reform in Taiwan.
(The Lancet) 

Facebook use leads to health-care reform in Taiwan. By - Shabbir Syed Abdul, Che-Wei Lin, Jeremiah Scholl, Luis Fernandez-Luque, Wen-Shan Jian, Min-Huei Hsu, Der-Ming Liou, Yu-Chuan Li
Facebook use leads to health-care reform in Taiwan : The Lancet July 2011

Constructieve aanval ingezet met positief resultaat. Hoe lang gaat het duren voordat wij als burgers via een medium gelijk FaceBook gaan participeren in wetgevende discussies. De Nieuwe Democratie?

Volg ons op Facebook: Therapeutisch Vasculair Centrum, Dr. Harry Spoelstra


dinsdag 19 juli 2011

Spatader operaties: Privé consultatie of in Ziekenhuis?

64% of CX delegates in favour of office-based vein practice



http://cxcontent.comrz.com/AfcIcon/Icons/Blank.gif


Delegates voted in favour of office-based vein practice for the treatment of varicose veins in a debate at CX33. The audience backed Ian Franklin, Imperial College, London, UK, with 64% of the votes, against 36% for Tim Lees, Newcastle, UK, who spoke against the motion “Office-based vein practice wins and should do so.”

Franklin, director of the CX Office-Based Vein Practice Course, told delegates that office vein practice “Is better for patients because it is quicker, everyone can be treated in a single visit, requires minimum time off work and is less disruptive. It is also much more applicable for people who used to be excluded from the operating theatre and, in many settings, it is more cost-effective.”
Franklin noted that, according to NHS figures, the number of endoluminal treatments have shown a steady increase from 2006 to 2009 compared to surgical treatments, which have declined progressively. “So many changes are happening right now and of course some of the endoluminal treatments were happening in the operating theatre, but the big jump came when it was done outside a clinic-based setting,” he said.


Het Therapeutisch Vasculair Centrum schaart zich achter deze grote meerderheid. Reeds enkele jaren is dit ook ons beleid. Hierdoor hebben wij al een grote ervaring in de behandeling van Veneuze pathologie buiten het Ziekenhuis. Wij zijn het dan ook eens met de leden van het CX33 congres, dat dit enkel voordelen heeft voor de patiënten en goedkoper is voor de Maatschappij.

Dr. Harry Spoelstra





Laag Moleculaire Heparine superieur in de behandeling van DVTr?

Is long-term low molecular weight heparin better than oral anticoagulation in reducing post-thrombotic syndrome?

Patients with deep vein thrombosis treated with low molecular weight heparin show a lower rate of post-thrombotic syndrome than those treated with vitamin K antagonists, a study presented at the European Venous Forum in Ljubljana, Slovenia, has shown.

After two years of follow-up, 45.7% of the patients in the vitamin K antagonists group had post-thrombotic syndrome vs. 25.3% of the patients treated with low molecular weight heparin. The results of a prospective, randomised study were presented by Marc A Cairols, Servei d’Angiologia i Cirurgia Vascular, Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, Barcelona, Spain.
“In the general population, deep vein thrombosis has an incidence of 160 cases per 100.000 inhabitants every year, with a mortality rate of 3.5%,” Cairols said. “In the acute phase, we need to avoid or reduce clot progression, and reduce complications such as pulmonary embolism. In the chronic period, we have to reduce recurrence of venous thromboembolism events, improve vein patency, preserve valve function, reduce the incidence of post-thrombotic syndrome and reduce vein hypertension.”
Post-thrombotic syndrome, Cairols added, is the most incapacitating complication. “The diagnosis is clinical, the incidence approaches to 20–50% in the general population, even after a correct anticoagulation therapy, and between 5–10% of the patients will be CEAP 4–6.”
The aim of the study was to assess whether, in patients with symptomatic lower limb deep vein thrombosis, long-term treatment with low molecular weight heparin is more effective in reducing the rate of post-thrombotic syndrome than vitamin K antagonists. A secondary aim was to assess whether valve incompetence after clot lysis is related to the incidence of post-thrombotic syndrome.
From January 2008 to December 2010, 376 patients were seen in the emergency department during the period. Of them, 150 had a well established diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis. Mean age was 42 years, and 58% were men. The inclusion criteria were acute proximal deep vein thrombosis and diagnosed using ultrasound imaging. Cancer patients and those with an expected live survival less than two years were excluded.
Patients were divided into two treatment groups. Group A included only patients receiving low molecular weight heparin from the beginning of the treatment. Group B included patients initially treated with low molecular weight heparin (5–7 days), replaced by an oral vitamin K antagonist a week later. Patients were randomly allocated with undisclosed envelops. Clinical follow-up were carried out every six months until two years with Villalta scale and duplex imaging. A Villalta score ≥10 and/or reflux lasting more than two seconds were considered diagnostic of significant post-thrombotic syndrome.
In the overall population, there was a 19.3% incidence of post-thrombotic syndrome patients (62% minor and 38% moderate). In group A there were 38 patients with post-thrombotic syndrome vs. 17 in the low molecular weight heparin group (p<0.008).
From 129 patients with valvular incompetence 46 had post-thrombotic syndrome after two year of follow-up. However, from the 21 with valvular competence nine showed post-thrombotic syndrome (p=0.34). Sixty six patients showed recanalisation, and 30 had post-thrombotic syndrome. In 84 there was no recanalisation and 25 had post-thrombotic syndrome.
In conclusion, Cairols said, long-term low molecular weight heparin showed fewer incidences of post-thrombotic syndrome after two years of follow-up. However, neither valve incompetence nor rate of recanalisation were associated with the rate of post-thrombotic syndrome.


Deze studie bevestigd onze eigen Klinische en Duplex resultaten en onderstreept onze behandelingskeuze voor LMWH in de behandeling van DVTr.

Dr. Harry Spoelstra


vrijdag 8 juli 2011

Wereldprimeur

Wereldnieuws:
Deze week in Zweden is de eerste patiënt behandeld voor luchtpijp kanker, door dit deel te verwijderen en te vervangen door een kunstmatige luchtpijp.
Het luchtpijp segment werd in het laboratorium vervaardigd door deze te laten groeien uit kunststof en lichaamscellen.
Dit kon op enkele dagen gemaakt worden.Grote voordeel, geen afstoting, geen zware medicatie
tegen afstoting, geen behoefte meer aan donor's !
Is dit de toekomst?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/heal​th-14047670



Dr. Harry Spoelstra

woensdag 29 juni 2011

Geïmporteerd goedkoop chirurgische instrumentarium uit Pakistan gevaarlijk!

Surgical tools used in NHS operations 'substandard'




Ook in België is dit helaas het geval.

Door de aanhoudende besparingen en de zoektocht naar goedkope alternatieven circuleert heel wat “slecht” chirurgisch materiaal ook in België. Wij wensen dan ook te benadrukken dat in het Therapeutisch Vasculair Centrum olv Dr. Harry Spoelstra, reeds meer dan 20jaar gewerkt wordt met chirurgisch materiaal afkomstig uit Duitsland en Zwitserland. Kwaliteit had en heeft nog altijd de hoogste prioriteit bij Dr. Harry Spoelstra in zijn privé centrum.


Artikel:


Microscopic shards of steel can puncture surgical gloves or become dislodged inside patients

Substandard surgical tools from Pakistan are putting UK patients at risk of potentially deadly injury and infection, BBC Panorama has found.
Faults include rough edges, steel burrs that can splinter during operations and corroded metals.
All surgical instruments have to meet regulatory standards but only one of the more than 180 NHS trusts and boards conducts rigorous tests on every tool.
Barts and the London NHS Trust reject almost 20% of tools as unsafe for use.
Tom Brophy, the dedicated technologist at Barts, said the prevalence of faulty equipment that could endanger patients' lives or cause serious injuries is so worrying that he has started documenting the faults.
While he is able to return unsuitable or faulty tools to suppliers, he said there is nothing to stop those same instruments from being sold on to another UK hospital, either within the NHS or private.
"On more than one occasion a supplier has rung me up and said that the instrument you rejected, I passed it onto another hospital and they accepted it," he said. "Of course they're going to accept it, because they haven't checked it."
While most hospitals carry out some degree of visual checks on instruments, only Barts employs a dedicated technologist.

Blood traces.
Poor quality surgical implements have been identified as a likely cause of MRSA infections because shards of steel have caused microscopic holes in surgical gloves.
Badly made instruments that have unwanted grooves or trenches can trap body tissue and fluids - another possible source of infection.

Pakistan's industry.

100 million instruments made annually in Sialkot
One in 10 sold to the UK
Only Germany and America buy more
70% of manufacturers registered in the UK are based in the country
12 of 19 samples collected in Sialkot by Panorama and tested in London were rejected
All of the 916 companies making or supplying surgical instruments in the UK must be registered with the Medicines and Health Care Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), but responsibility for quality rests with suppliers and manufacturers.
Neither the NHS or the MHRA requires suppliers to inspect manufacturers.
In a statement, the MHRA said "it has no evidence that non-compliant instruments are being supplied to the NHS", but added that if there were such evidence, it had "a range of powers and sanctions available to deal with the problem".
In addition to rejecting poor quality equipment that is sold to Barts, Mr Brophy said he has been sent used equipment - with traces of blood still on the instruments - being passed off as new.

No hygiene.

Two-thirds of the world's surgical instruments are made in the city of Sialkot in northern Pakistan and 70% of the UK's registered manufacturers are based in the city.
While some of the larger companies operate state-of-the art facilities and have rigorous quality-control procedures in place, Panorama found evidence of smaller firms that do not use magnifying glasses to inspect finished instruments before putting the required quality stamp on them.
Others outsourced manufacturing to some of the 3,000 back-street workshops in the city where undercover filming revealed a complete lack of hygiene or quality control.
Professor Brian Toft, a government adviser on patient safety, said if procurement officers in both the NHS and private hospitals in the UK knew of the conditions in which the surgical instruments were being made, they would "faint at the thought of it".
"I cannot believe that anybody in the NHS knows this is going on," he said.








donderdag 16 juni 2011

New Guidelines

New guidelines released for the evaluation and treatment of varicose veins


Wednesday, 11 May 2011

New guidelines for the management of varicose veins and associated chronic venous disease (CVD) were recently published in a supplement to Journal of Vascular Surgery (J Vasc Surg 2011;53(5 Suppl):2S-48S), journal of the Society for Vascular Surgery. The guidelines, which focus on evaluation and treatment of varicose veins of the lower limbs and pelvis, were developed by a joint Venous Guideline Committee of the Society for Vascular Surgery and the American Venous Forum.

http://cxcontent.comrz.com/AfcIcon/Icons/Blank.gif

An estimated 23% of the adult population in the USA has varicose veins, and 6% has more advanced chronic venous disease, including skin changes and healed or active venous ulcers. Long considered a cosmetic problem, varicose veins are now known to cause more serious disability, ranging from discomfort and pain that cause lost work days and decreased quality of life to, in the most serious cases of chronic venous disease and venous ulcers, loss of limb or loss of life.

“Improved technology and new surgical techniques, many of which can be done in an office setting, have led to dramatic changes in the treatment of varicose veins,” said Peter Gloviczki, professor of surgery, Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, USA, who chaired the Venous Guideline Committee and is the vice- president of the Society for Vascular Surgery and past president of the American Venous Forum. “The new treatment options can significantly improve patient outcomes. They can experience less discomfort, improved quality of life and earlier return to work than was previously possible.”

 

Key recommendations

The guidelines feature nine key recommendations. The strength of each guideline varies based on the benefits as compared to the risks, burdens and costs.

  • We recommend that in patients with varicose veins or more severe chronic venous disease, a complete history and detailed physical examination are complemented by duplex scanning of the deep and superficial veins.
  • We recommend that the CEAP (clinical, etiologic, anatomic, pathophysiologic) classification is used for patients with chronic venous disease and that the revised venous clinical severity score is used to assess treatment outcome.
  • We suggest compression therapy for patients with symptomatic varicose veins but recommend against compression therapy as the primary treatment if the patient is a candidate for saphenous vein ablation.
  • We recommend compression therapy as the primary treatment to aid healing of venous ulceration.
  • To decrease recurrence of venous ulcers, we recommend ablation of the incompetent superficial veins in addition to compression therapy.
  • For treatment of the incompetent great saphenous vein we recommend endovenous thermal ablation (laser) over high ligation and inversion stripping of the saphenous vein to the level of the knee.
  • We recommend phlebectomy or sclerotherapy to treat varicose tributaries and suggest foam sclerotherapy as an option for treatment of the incompetent saphenous vein.
  • We recommend against selective treatment of perforating vein incompetence in patients with simple varicose veins (CEAP class C2), but we suggest treatment of pathologic perforating veins (outward flow 500 ms duration, vein diameter 3.5 mm) located underneath healed or active ulcers (CEAP class C5-C6).
  • We suggest treatment of pelvic congestion syndrome and pelvic varices with coil embolization, plugs, or transcatheter sclerotherapy, used alone or in combination.

The abstract can be found on http://www.jvascsurg.org/article/S0741-5214(11)00327-2/abstract

 

 

 

 

 

woensdag 4 mei 2011

Statistieken 2010

Resultaten voor 2010:

 

Bij de verwerking van onze Endolaser 1470nm EVLT ingrepen voor patiënten met varices(spataders) voor het jaar 2010 blijkt dat de resultaten volledig overeenstemmen, zelfs beter zijn,  dan die van de reeds gepubliceerde resultaten in de wereldliteratuur. In het bijzonder kennen wij een direct slaagpercentage van 99,3%. Dit wil zeggen dat wij verleden jaar slechts één patiënt hebben gekend waarbij de procedure mislukte. Dit door anatomische problemen, waarbij de laser fiber niet tot in de lies(cross) kon worden gebracht. Een mooi resultaat kon daarna wel bereikt worden door een combinatie met Foam-sclerotherapie. Alle ingrepen vonden plaats onder plaatselijke verdoving.

Als wij dan de Duplex echografie controles analyseren 3, 6,9 en 12 maanden na de ingrepen, dan zien wij dat een initieel succes zo blijft. Er werden geen recanalisaties of heropeningen gezien in de dicht gelaserde VSM of VSP segmenten. Wellicht is dit te wijten aan onze techniek, waarbij qua tumescentie en laser energie een welbepaald schema wordt gevolgd. Voor 2010 betekent dit dan dat wij een succesratio hebben van 100%. Dr H. Spoelstra en zijn team realiseren zich goed dat dit unieke cijfers zijn, maar ze zijn er ook trots op. Dit betekent even wel dat Dr H. Spoelstra dit jaar dezelfde resultaten wil en zal nastreven. Een uitdaging die hij graag aanneemt!

 

 

woensdag 20 april 2011

Buitenlandse patiënten

TREATMENT ABROAD programma:
Sedert nov. 2010 heeft Dr. H. Spoelstra in zijn Therapeutisch Vasculair Centrum al verschillende aanvragen ontvangen vanuit Engeland voor een Endoveneuze Laser spatader behandeling.
Het begon met één in november en nu zien wij 4 tot 6 per maand. Dit succes is niet alleen te danken aan een moderne aanpak met de 1470nm Endolaser aan internationaal concurrerende prijzen, maar ook onze all-in package deals met hotel en toeristische uitstappen naar Brugge, Gent en Brussel scoren goed.
Morgen worden weer twee patiënten geopereerd die vandaag zijn aangekomen en hun Paasweekend hier gaan doorbrengen.Hierdoor steunt het Centrum ook de lokale Vlaamse economie.





woensdag 6 april 2011

EVLT ( Endoveneuze Laser behandeling)

Radial 1470nm Endolaser Superieur!
Eur J. Vasc Endovasc Surg. 2010 Aug;40(2):254-9. Epub 2010 May 23.

Comparison of 980 nm laser and bare-tip fibre with 1470 nm laser and radial fibre in the treatment of great saphenous vein varicosities: a prospective randomised clinical trial.

Doganci S, Demirkilic U.
Gulhane Military Academy of Medicine, Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Ankara, Turkey. suat_doganci@yahoo.com

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study is to compare efficacy, early postoperative morbidity and patient comfort of two laser wavelengths and fibre types in treatment of great saphenous vein (GSV) incompetence resulting in varicosities of the lower limb.
DESIGN: Prospective randomised clinical trial.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty patients (106 limbs) were randomised into two groups. They were treated with bare-tip fibres and a 980 nm laser in group 1 and radial fibres and 1470 nm laser in group 2 in order to ablate the GSV. Local pain, ecchymosis, induration and paraesthesia in treated regions, distance from skin, vein diameter, treated vein length, tumescent anaesthesia volume, delivered energy and patient satisfaction were recorded. Follow-up visits were planned on the 2nd postoperative day, 7th day, 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 6th months.
RESULTS: Mean GSV diameters at saphenofemoral junction and knee levels were 12.1 S.D. 4.3 mm and 8.2 S.D. 2.4 mm, and 11.8 S.D. 4.1 mm and 7.9 S.D. 2.6 mm respectively in groups 1 and 2. There were 14 patients with induration, 13 with ecchymosis and nine minimal paraesthesia in group 1 and no or minimal local pain, minimum ecchymosis or induration in group 2. Duration of pain and need for analgesia was also lower in group 2 (p < 0.05). There was significant difference on postoperative day 2, day 7 and 1st month control in favour of group 2 in venous clinical severity scores (VCSS).
CONCLUSION: Treatment of the GSV by endovenous laser ablation using a 1470 nm laser and a radial fibre resulted in less postoperative pain and better VCSS scores in the first month than treatment with a 980 nm laser and a bare-tip fibre.
Copyright (c) 2010 European Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


woensdag 23 maart 2011

Botox en Migraine

BOTOX en Migraine


"FDA approves Botox for migraine headaches"


De Amerikaanse FDA heeft deze maand het gebruik van Botox als behandeling van spanningshoofdpijn( Migraine) goed gekeurd. Dit geeft een officiële bevestiging van de diverse studies die dit al lang hadden aangegeven. Met deze FDA bevestiging wordt dus een heel nieuw en wetenschappelijk onderbouwde uitbreiding gegeven aan de indicatie en behandeling van BOTOX.


In ons centrum heeft Dr Spoelstra deze behandeling reeds geruime tijd uitgevoerd met mooie resultaten. Het was eigenlijk de reden ook waarom Dr Harry Spoelstra met Botox behandelingen is gestart. De relatie tussen Migraine, spanningshoofdpijnen en bloedvatenspasmen was al langer bekend. Hij is dus nu verheugd dat de FDA zijn goedkeuring heeft gegeven, het bevestigt enkel wat in de Vasculaire Geneeskunde reeds langer gekend was, maar enkel nog nood had aan erkenning.





woensdag 9 maart 2011

EVLT met de 1470nm laser:

EVLT met de 1470nm Laser:
Sinds Maart 2006 gebruiken wij de Endoveneuze laser techniek, eerst de 980nm laser, maar nu de nieuwe 1470nm laser. Deze laatste is tot 5x krachtiger maar met duidelijk minder neveneffecten dan de vorige laser (980 nm laser). De reden voor die goede resultaten zijn de meer selectieve energie absorptie door de zieke ader. Hierdoor verkrijgt men een snelle en volledige “vernietiging” van de zieke ader( spatader). De voordelen hiervan zijn dan duidelijk: niet alleen betere resultaten, maar ook minder postoperatieve pijn en heel weinig ecchymosen of bloeduitstortingen. Een vrijwel pijnloze postoperatieve periode is verzekerd! Deze Endoveneuze laserbehandeling gebeurd in ons centrum onder locale verdoving. Door de voordelen van de 1470nm laser en de lokale verdoving is een onmiddellijke mobilisatie mogelijk met weinig tot geen werkonderbreking tot gevolg. Binnen en buiten op +/- 2 uur en uw spatader probleem opgelost!






donderdag 17 februari 2011

Foam Sclerotherapie

Febr 2011...........1000 patiënten verzorgd met Foam Sclerotherapie voor stam VSM en/of VSP insufficiëntie! Succesratio nà 1 jaar 94%

Foam Sclerotherapy