Objectives: The clinical severity of venous disease is often worse in obese patients. The objectives of this study were to compare lower limb venous physiology assessed by air plethysmography in a large group of obese and normal-weight patients; to consider the effect of posture on these measures and on foot vein pressure in a smaller cohort.
Methods: Venous function was assessed using air plethysmography and duplex scanning in 934 consecutive patients presenting for assessment of venous disease. These were grouped into obese or non-obese categories. A smaller group of twenty patients with a range of body weights were randomly selected from a database of patients with varicose veins. Foot vein pressures and femoral vein diameter were measured standing, sitting, lying and ambulating.
Results: Venous disease was more clinically severe in the obese limbs (CEAP C5&6 non-obese group 20.5%, obese group 35.4%, p<0.001 chi(2)). Venous reflux was worse in the obese but measures of muscle pump function were better. Residual volumes and fractions were better in the obese (mean residual volume, non-obese 60 SD 36, obese 50 SD 42, p<0.001 t test). In the smaller study group weight correlated with the diameter of the superficial femoral vein (r=0.50), ambulatory venous pressure (r=0.45), venous filling index (r=0.49) and the ejection volume (r=0.38, p<0.05). The foot venous pressure was significantly greater in the obese in all positions.
Conclusion: The CEAP clinical stage of venous disease is more advanced in obese patients than non-obese patients with comparable anatomical patterns of venous incompetence. This may be the result of raised intra-abdominal pressure reported in previous studies, leading to greater reflux, increased vein diameter and venous pressures.