Understanding Venous Reflux the Cause of Varicose Veins and Venous Leg Ulcers

Author:   Mark S. Whiteley
Publisher:   Whiteley Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9781908586001


Pages:   98
Publication Date:   26 September 2011
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Understanding Venous Reflux the Cause of Varicose Veins and Venous Leg Ulcers


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Overview

"Almost 1 in 2 people suffer from problems with leg veins - so if you don't have them then someone close to you will. Venous reflux (the major cause of leg vein problems) can cause tired or aching legs, swollen or itchy ankles. Many people suffering from venous reflux are unaware of the problem, until they develop unsightly varicose veins, thread veins, venous eczema or venous leg ulcers. Many doctors and nurses are not aware of the new information available and still treat their patients inappropriately with creams, bandages or support stockings. ""Understanding Venous Reflux - the cause of varicose veins and leg ulcers"" has been written by Mark Whiteley, an internationally renowned vein expert. With clear explanations, illustrated by over 50 easy-to-follow diagrams, this book makes the understanding of venous reflux - the underlying cause of varicose veins and most venous problems (such as thread veins, venous leg ulcers, venous eczema, discoloured ankles, etc.) - accessible to most readers, helping them decide on what treatment they should seek. For medical and nursing students, as well as all doctors, nurses and other health care workers who deal with legs and leg vein problems, this is an essential text."

Full Product Details

Author:   Mark S. Whiteley
Publisher:   Whiteley Publishing Ltd
Imprint:   Whiteley Publishing Ltd
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.144kg
ISBN:  

9781908586001


ISBN 10:   1908586001
Pages:   98
Publication Date:   26 September 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

1 - The venous system of the lower limb 2 - Pressure in the venous circulation at rest 3 - Functional anatomy relating to the venous system of the legs 4 - The venous pump of the lower limb 5 - Valve failure and venous reflux (venous insufficiency) 6 - `Venous hypertension’ - an obsolete term 7 - Inflammation in venous reflux disease (chronic venous insufficiency) 8 - Pressure, flow and inflammation - how they relate in venous reflux disease 9 - Varicose veins - the `good guys’ 10 - Patterns of reflux - passive and active phase reflux 11 - Conclusion

Reviews

"Muhammad Salim; 5.0 out of 5 stars: Simple and well written. The book is easy to read. Concepts are explained in a simple yet concise way. I recommend this book to anyone who needs a good start in understanding venous reflux Disease. Kenneth U. Ekechukwu. 5.0 out of 5 stars: Superb new text on the block. Excellent, concise, and easy to read. Bold and truthful in debunking misleading, confusing time-honoured traditions and concepts. A firm foundation for understanding the basics of venous disease of the loer limbs and a reliable intro of the problem for the beginner and the dogmatic old horse. May benefit from some grammatical editing to remove distracting errors. IDMansell. 5.0 out of 5 stars: Understanding venous reflux: I'm a Tissue VViabilitynurse and was recommended this book by a vascular consultant at a conference in Manchester. I've been teaching district nurses and care home staff how to assess & manage venous leg ulcers for over 15 years. Part of the course includes pathophysiology of venous disease being a great believer in treat the cause not the symptom. That's been blown out of the water by the revelations in this book. It's easy and concise to read with good systematic approach to understanding venous reflux. ""venous hypertension"" becoming an obsolete term is initially difficult to assimilate, but the clarity of the text and research appears irrefutable. Although judging from the book there are still those out there who prefer to do just that. Chapeter 7 & 8 are the clinchers and worthy of careful analysis . The preceding chapters lead you in with simple explanation of the venous system and how it functions. Good use of simple diagrams support and consolidate the text. Some of the myths associated with venous hypertension are also refuted. Male vs female incidence obesity & pregnancy are disputed as well as other established so-called facts precipitating venous disease. I would recommend this book as does the author if you're any way involved in dealing with patients with venous ulcers both to correctly inform your patients and support staff in the assessment and management of venous leg ulcers. ""once a leg ulcer patient always a leg ulcer patient"" but not it would appear with venous hypertension but with venous reflux."


Muhammad Salim; 5.0 out of 5 stars: Simple and well written. The book is easy to read. Concepts are explained in a simple yet concise way. I recommend this book to anyone who needs a good start in understanding venous reflux Disease. Kenneth U. Ekechukwu. 5.0 out of 5 stars: Superb new text on the block. Excellent, concise, and easy to read. Bold and truthful in debunking misleading, confusing time-honoured traditions and concepts. A firm foundation for understanding the basics of venous disease of the loer limbs and a reliable intro of the problem for the beginner and the dogmatic old horse. May benefit from some grammatical editing to remove distracting errors. IDMansell. 5.0 out of 5 stars: Understanding venous reflux: I'm a Tissue VViabilitynurse and was recommended this book by a vascular consultant at a conference in Manchester. I've been teaching district nurses and care home staff how to assess & manage venous leg ulcers for over 15 years. Part of the course includes pathophysiology of venous disease being a great believer in treat the cause not the symptom. That's been blown out of the water by the revelations in this book. It's easy and concise to read with good systematic approach to understanding venous reflux. venous hypertension becoming an obsolete term is initially difficult to assimilate, but the clarity of the text and research appears irrefutable. Although judging from the book there are still those out there who prefer to do just that. Chapeter 7 & 8 are the clinchers and worthy of careful analysis . The preceding chapters lead you in with simple explanation of the venous system and how it functions. Good use of simple diagrams support and consolidate the text. Some of the myths associated with venous hypertension are also refuted. Male vs female incidence obesity & pregnancy are disputed as well as other established so-called facts precipitating venous disease. I would recommend this book as does the author if you're any way involved in dealing with patients with venous ulcers both to correctly inform your patients and support staff in the assessment and management of venous leg ulcers. once a leg ulcer patient always a leg ulcer patient but not it would appear with venous hypertension but with venous reflux.


Muhammad Salim 5.0 out of 5 stars: Simple and well written Book is easy to read. Concepts are explained in a simple yet concise way. I recommend this book to anyone who needs a good start in understanding venous reflux Disease. Kenneth U. Ekechukwu 5.0 out of 5 stars: Superb new text on the block. Excellent, concise, and easy to read. Bold and truthful in debunking misleading, confusing time-honoured traditions and concepts. A firm foundation for understanding the basics of venous disease of the lower limbs and a reliable intro of the problem for the beginner and the dogmatic old horse. May benefit from some grammatical editing to remove distracting errors. IDMansell 5.0 out of 5 stars: Understanding venous reflux I'm a Tissue VViabilitynurse and was recommended this book by a vascular consultant at a conference in Manchester. I've been teaching district nurses and care home staff how to assess & manage venous leg ulcers for over 15 years. Part of the course includes pathophysiology of venous disease being a great believer in treat the cause not the symptom. That's been blown out of the water by the revelations in this book. It's easy and concise to read with good systematic approach to understanding venous reflux. venous hypertension becoming an obsolete term is initially difficult to assimilate, but the clarity of the text and research appears irrefutable. Although judging from the book there are still those out there who prefer to do just that. Chapeter 7 & 8 are the clinchers and worthy of careful analysis . The preceding chapters lead you in with simple explanation of the venous system and how it functions. Good use of simple diagrams support and consolidate the text. Some of the myths associated with venous hypertension are also refuted. Male vs female incidence obesity & pregnancy are disputed aswell as other established so called facts precipitating venous disease. I would recommend this book as does the author if you're any way involved in dealing with patients with venous ulcers both to correctly inform your patients and support staff in the assessment and management of venous leg ulcers. once a leg ulcer patient always a leg ulcer patient but not it would appear with venous hypertension but with venous reflux.


Author Information

"Mark Whiteley is a consultant venous surgeon and founder of The Whiteley Clinic, now in London, Guildford and Bristol. He is also a visiting Professor at the University of Surrey and an internationally recognised expert in venous disease and endovenous surgery. Mark qualified in 1986 from St. Bartholomew's Hospital, completed the Bristol and Portsmouth surgical rotations before becoming a lecturer in surgery at the University of Bath followed by Oxford University. He was appointed as a consultant vascular surgeon at The Royal Surrey County Hospital before leaving and becoming 100% venous surgeon in 2005. With his colleague Judy Holdstock, he introduced endovenous surgery into the UK by performing the first endovenous operation in the country on 12th March 1999. Mark founded The Whiteley Clinic in 2001 and invented the TRLOP operation with Judy Holdstock the same year. He founded The College of Phlebology in 2011 and runs an annual international veins meeting in London, and founded the Leg Ulcer Charity - to empower patients to find a cure and to teach health care professionals that most leg ulcers can be cured without long tern dressings and bandages. Mark has written this book and edited another book on veins; has written 15 chapters on veins in textbooks; has over 110 peer-reviewed research papers and has won multiple international and national prizes for his work in veins. He is regularly invited to meetings around the world to give guest lectures on venous diagnosis and treatments, or to chair or moderate sessions and sits on the international committee of the American Venous Forum. In 2017 he was given an award by Publons for being in top 1% of medical reviewers as a peer-reviewer for venous papers. Committed to education, Mark runs the EVLT (endovenous laser treatment) International Academy for Angiodynamics 4 times per year since 2012 and runs courses, work experience, summer research fellows, extended research fellowships and PhD students. He won a KTP grant from the UK government to set up a research department - performing confidential research for companies to advise them on how to optimise their vein treatments and to do his own research to ensure the efficacy of treatments used at The Whiteley Clinic as part of The Whiteley Protocol. Mark is regularly featured in the national media in the UK: he has been recommended by Tatler for the last 10 years. He has had multiple appearances on TV including - ""Embarrassing Bodies"", ""Harley Street"", ""Don't ask the Doctor"" as well as being featured in featured in national newspapers and magazines regularly."

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