Examinando por Materia "Insuficiencia Venosa"
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Ítem Acceso abierto Effectiveness of compression therapy on the healing time of varicose ulcers in patients with venous insufficiency(Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, 2019-11-24) Broncano Montero, Bertha Patricia; Camarena Nuñez, Rocio Del Pilar; Arevalo Marcos, Rodolfo AmadoObjective: Systematize available evidence on the effectiveness of the use of compression therapy against the healing time of varicose ulcers in patients with venous insufficiency. Material and methods: a systematic review of international scientific articles is carried out, which have been acquired by searching the database: pubmed, lilacs, Cochrane, Elsevier. Cochrane, Those that have been selected and analyzed, located through the evidence hierarchy pyramid. Of the 10 articles systematically reviewed, 60% (n= 6/10) are systematic reviews, 20% (n= 2/10) are meta-analyses, 10% (n= 1/10) are trials. randomized controlled study and 10% (n= 1/10) is a prospective randomized study. Likewise, according to the results obtained from the systematic review carried out in the present study, they come from the countries of Brazil (20%), Germany (10%), Serbia (10%), United Kingdom (30%), Canada (10% ), Switzerland (10%), Spain (10%). Results: The evidence found through the scientific articles reviewed indicates that 100% (n=10/10) that the use of some type of compression therapy favors the healing of varicose ulcers. Conclusions: It is found that 10 of the 10 evidence analyzed agree that using compression therapy reduces healing time in patients with varicose ulcers.Ítem Acceso abierto Effectiveness of intravenous treatment to reduce complications in post-operative patients for venous insufficiency(Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, 2021-06-20) Almeida Torres, Felicita Ynés; Rivera Palomino, Cynthia Elizabeth Geraldine; Rivera Lozada de Bonilla, OrianaObjective: Analyze and systematize the evidence on the effectiveness of intravenous treatment to reduce complications in post-operative patients for venous insufficiency. Materials and Methods: The type of research was quantitative and the study design is a systematic review, the population was a total of 20 scientific articles which only 10 scientific articles published and indexed in scientific databases were sampled, to The GRADE method was used to evaluate the articles, which evaluated the quality of evidence and the strength of recommendation. Results: Of 100% of the articles reviewed, 10% correspond to Holland, China, South Korea and Colombia respectively and 20% correspond to Brazil, Chile and Egypt. In relation to the type of study, it was 100% quantitative and the study design corresponds to 10% Cohort, 20% retrospective clinical trial and 70% prospective randomized clinical trial. Conclusions: It is concluded that 90% of the studies show that the effectiveness of intravenous treatment in reducing complications in post-operative patients with venous insufficiency improves short-term results.Ítem Acceso abierto Risk factors and quality of life in patients with venous ulcers in the lower limbs who attend a level II hospital in Arequipa Peru 2022.(Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, 2022-05-15) Bejarano Vásquez, Sulbi Magali; Cabrera Espezua, Jeannelly PaolaThe objective of this research is to determine the risk factors that influence the quality of life of patients with venous ulcers in the lower limbs in patients who attend a level II hospital in Arequipa, Peru in 2022. To accomplish this research, the quantitative approach is used, a non-experimental design of a descriptive correlational level, the sample will be made up of 156 and a questionnaire will be conveniently used to evaluate the risk factors for venous ulcers, which allows to evaluate twenty factors independently and grouped into 5 dimensions, and also the specialized instrument CCVUQ (according to its acronym in English) or the Charing Cross Scale for Venous Ulcers to evaluate the quality of life, which consists of 21 items and 4 dimensions. These instruments are intended to be applied to 100 patients with venous insufficiency and who are treated in the Outpatient Clinic of the Healing Topic.
