ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Prevalence of Onychodystrophy in Patients With Chronic Venous Disease of the Lower Limbs

F

Fundació Institut de Recerca de l'Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau

Status

Completed

Conditions

Lower Extremity Chronic Venous Insufficiency
Onychodystrophy

Treatments

Other: observational cross-sect. analytical inferential unicentric

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02731222
IIBSP-ONI-2015-67

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this study is to determine the degree of correlation between the clinical severity of chronic venous disease and the prevalence of onychodystrophy. The completion of the study will require a previous synthetic explanation of the aforementioned two diseases, emphasizing the factors which have an impact on the proposed analysis.

Full description

The ultimate goal of this work is to determine if patients with a higher clinical severity of chronic venous disease also present a higher prevalence of onychodystrophy. Chronic venous disease (CVD) is a vascular disease that manifests itself in the lower limbs and is related to a number of different clinical syndromes, all of which have venous hypertension (HTV) in common.

Onychodystrophy in the lower limbs is a progressive non-infectious condition associated with various factors the prevalence of which increases with age.It is mainly an acquired condition, but it can also be congenital. It is associated to a number of factors, it can sometimes be asymptomatic and it is progressive, non transmittable and evolves at a slow pace. It is characterised by an abnormal pigmentation, changes in the shape or texture and/or the deformation of nails.

The work performed was observational, cross-sectional, analytical, inferential and unicentric. In order to prove its feasibility, the researcher conducted a preliminary investigation work (pilot study) with a total of 40 patients (aged 40 to 85) who were treated at the Service of Angiology and Vascular Surgery of the Hospital de Sant Pau (Barcelona, Spain). These patients were selected to verify their data and then the researcher performed a statistical study from a descriptive and inferential point of view to find out whether there is a relation betwen the prevalence of onychodystrophy and the degree of severity of chronic venous disease. In order to minimise methodological mistakes in the outcomes and sampling, the study has been carefully defined and framed.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Subjects with an age ranging between 40 and 85 years.
  • Patients who attend the service of Angiology, Vascular and Endovascular Surgery with chronic venous disease in their lower limbs and presenting a clinical degree according to the CEAP Classification (Clinic, Etiology, Anatomy, Pathophysiology) ranging from C0 to C6, while at the same time manifesting or not venous reflux when exposed to an echo-Doppler scan.
  • Patients agreeing to voluntarily participate in the study who sign the informed consent document.

Exclusion criteria

  • Congenital Onychopathy
  • Presence in any nail plate of fungal, viral or bacterial infections
  • Emergence of digital deformities in feet
  • Manifestation of biomechanical problems
  • Presence of advanced degenerative joint disease (arthrosis, arthritis)
  • Patients who make or have made routine use of inappropriate or poorly adjusted footwear and especially those who have an onychodystrophy which is clearly and directly atributable to it
  • Individuals presenting a Greek foot and especially those that present onychodystrophy on their second toe.
  • Patients in which onychodystrophy is due to a surgical iatrogenic event
  • Individuals with existing subungual tumours (benign or malignant).
  • Patients who take or have taken any drug that causes or is directly associated with onychodystrophy
  • Patients with a history of skin diseases such as psoriasis, lichen planus or alopecia areata associated with nail manifestations.
  • Patients with a background of physical or chemical trauma on their toenails that has clearly given rise to onychodystrophy.
  • Individuals presenting any type of amputation of the lower limbs, either in the leg or the foot, including those presenting a toe amputation (total or partial).
  • Patients with a history of toenail surgery (as recent as a year or less).
  • Individuals that, despite complying with all the requirements of the study, decline to participate or refuse to sign the informed consent document.
  • People with any medical illness or psychiatric disorder which, in the opinion of the investigator, preclude them from understanding the reason for their selection or who were unable to give informed consent to their participation in the study.
  • Subjects with post-thrombotic syndrome.
  • Any affected lower limb with varicose veins having undergone surgery with any invasive procedure was excluded.
  • Patients presenting nail prosthesis or cosmetics were also excluded from the study

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems