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pmid: 9787306
To assess the influence of a vascular-led community service on the outcome of chronic leg ulcers.Before and after study.Healing and recurrence were compared between ulcerated limbs (n = 149) from a random sample of 200 patients treated in the community and consecutive limbs (n = 200) from 180 patients treated in specialised clinics. In these clinics, vascular disease was routinely identified with venous duplex and ankle-brachial pressure index. Surgery was offered if superficial vein reflux alone was detected. Compression bandaging was applied to limbs with ABPI > 0.85. Healed limbs were treated with compression hosiery.After the clinics were introduced, the 12 and 24-week healing rates increased from 12 and 29 per cent to 53 and 68 per cent respectively (p < 0.01), and the 6 and 12 month recurrence rates decreased from 43 and 54 per cent to 21 and 23 per cent respectively (p < 0.01). Superficial venous surgery reduced recurrence at 1 year to 9 per cent.Outcome of leg ulcers is improved in a vascular-led community service. Routine surgical correction, in cases of reflux limited to the superficial system, may further reduce the chance of recurrence.
Chronic leg ulcer, Medicine(all), Male, Wound Healing, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital, Bandages, Duplex, Varicose Ulcer, Treatment Outcome, Ambulatory Surgical Procedures, England, Recurrence, Venous reflux, Humans, Female, Community Health Services, Aged, Program Evaluation
Chronic leg ulcer, Medicine(all), Male, Wound Healing, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital, Bandages, Duplex, Varicose Ulcer, Treatment Outcome, Ambulatory Surgical Procedures, England, Recurrence, Venous reflux, Humans, Female, Community Health Services, Aged, Program Evaluation
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influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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