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Vicious Circle With Venous Hypertension, Irregular Flow, Pathological Venous Wall Remodeling, and Valve Destruction in Chronic Venous Disease: A Review
Nadasy, G.L. ✉ [Nádasy, György László (Keringésélettan), author] Department of Physiology (SU / FM / I)
;
Patai, B.B.
;
Molnar, A.A. [Molnár, Andrea Ágnes (kardiológia, belg...), author] Department of Cardiology – Heart and Vascular C... (SU / FM / C)
;
Hetthessy, J.R. [Hetthéssy, Judit (Ortopédia), author] Department of Orthopedics (SU / FM / C)
;
Tokes, A.-M. [Tőkés, Anna-Mária (Emlőpathológia és...), author] Patológiai, Igazságügyi és Biztosítási Orvostan... (SU / FM / I)
;
Varady, Z.
;
Dornyei, G. [Bednárikné Dörnyei, Gabriella (Érfiziológia), author] Department of Morphology and Physiology (SU / FHS)
English Survey paper (Journal Article) Scientific
Published:
ANGIOLOGY 0003-3197 1940-1574
77
(3)
pp. 271-295
2026
SJR Scopus - Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine: Q2
Identifiers
MTMT: 35059257
DOI:
10.1177/00033197241256680
WoS:
001242001100001
Scopus:
85195552992
PubMed:
38839285
Fundings:
(TO 32019) Funder: HSRF
(TO 42670) Funder: HSRF
NKFIH(NVKP_16-1-2016-0004)
Subjects:
MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES
Substantial advances occurred in phlebological practice in the last two decades. With the use of modern diagnostic equipment, the patients’ venous hemodynamics can be examined in detail in everyday practice. Application of venous segments for arterial bypasses motivated studies on the effect of hemodynamic load on the venous wall. New animal models have been developed to study hemodynamic effects on the venous system. In vivo and in vitro studies revealed cellular phase transitions of venous endothelial, smooth muscle, and fibroblastic cells and changes in connective tissue composition, under hemodynamic load and at different locations of the chronically diseased venous system. This review is an attempt to integrate our knowledge from epidemiology, paleoanthropology and anthropology, clinical and experimental hemodynamic studies, histology, cell physiology, cell pathology, and molecular biology on the complex pathomechanism of this frequent disease. Our conclusion is that the disease is initiated by limited genetic adaptation of mankind not to bipedalism but to bipedalism in the unmoving standing or sitting position. In the course of the disease several pathologic vicious circles emerge, sustained venous hypertension inducing cellular phase transitions, chronic wall inflammation, apoptosis of cells, pathologic dilation, and valvular damage which, in turn, further aggravate the venous hypertension. © The Author(s) 2024.
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2026-06-07 06:50
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