Lorenzo Tessari
AbstractA venous gas microembolization should lead to some loss of gas exchange surface, with consequent gas exchange abnormalities and reduction in the transfer factor of the lung for carbon monoxide (TLCO). Aim of this proof-of-concept study was to verify whether TLCO worsens after foam sclerotherapy (FS) treatment.
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All my congrats to the Authors for the excellent work and for the objectives they gained.
It was time that someone pointed out the difference among sclerotherapy adverse events that are linked to the drug and those linked to the carrier (the gas bubble) or to the release of endothelial cathabolites deriving from the drug itself (endothelin1, histamin, serotonin, etc.).
In the paper the Authors demonstrate that there is no link with the biocompatible soluble (CO2, O2) gas for some adverse events that, even if rarely, can happen (bronchospasm, stroke, etc.) after foam sclerotherapy.
Nevertheless, it would have been useful to compare biocompatible gases with air.
Concerning the drug, Australian, English and Italian Authors (Parsi,Watkins, Tessari, Izzo ) (1,2,3) have already demonstrated the drug inactivation as soon as it is bound by the blood proteins, a binding that occurs as soon as the sclerosing agent gets into the blood stream.
Surely, the sclerotherapy adverse effects can derive from the endothelial cathabolites release, as suggested by the Authors, in an amount that is proportional to the endothelial treated area, as derived from the major frequency of complications following spider veins rather than saphenous trunk treatments.
1. Watkins MR. Deactivation of sodium tetradecyl sulphate injection by blood proteins.
Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2011;41:521-5.[Abstract][PubMed]
2. Parsi K, Exner T, Low J, et al. In vitro effects of detergent sclerosants on antithrombotic mechanism.
Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2009;38:220-8.[Abstract][PubMed]
3. Tessari L, Cavezzi A, Izzo M, et al. In vivo demonstration of sodiumtetradecysulphate sclerosant foam binding with blood proteins. (Abstract - 13th Annual meeting of the European Venous Forum, Thursday 28 June–Saturday 30 June 2012, Florence, Italy).
Phlebology 2012;27:307-26.[Abstract]
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