Thromboangiitis obliterans, commonly known as "Buerger's disease," is an allergic inflammatory condition that occurs in the blood vessels. It causes segmental narrowing and occlusion of medium and small arteries, leading to a loss of nutrition in the extremities, resulting in ulcers and necrosis. This is a relatively stubborn vascular disease that tends to recur easily, severely affecting the quality of life of patients. The vast majority of cases occur in men aged 20-40, with very few cases seen in women. The exact cause of thromboangiitis obliterans is not yet fully understood, but clinical studies have found it to be associated with smoking, sex hormones, immunity, and genetics. Therefore, how to treat thromboangiitis and correctly manage this condition becomes an important issue. Below, we will invite an expert from the Shanxi Yikang Thromboangiitis Hospital to introduce us to this topic.
Symptoms of thromboangiitis include intermittent claudication, where patients often experience soreness, swelling, numbness, coldness in the affected limb, resting pain, gangrene in the toes or foot, recurrent migratory superficial phlebitis in the calf or foot, and weakened or absent pulsation in the medium and small arteries (most commonly the dorsalis pedis artery). The tongue often appears pale purple or dark purple, may have petechiae or ecchymosis, and the tongue coating is white and moist.
Traditional therapies have caused much suffering to patients and have made them lose confidence in being cured.
Traditional treatments for thromboangiitis mainly focus on "activating blood circulation and resolving stasis" and "dissolving thrombi," treating thromboangiitis as a blood disease. However, the "thrombus" is actually a result of thromboangiitis, representing the "symptom" rather than the "cause." Treating the "symptom" can only alleviate symptoms and cannot achieve a cure. Due to unclear understanding of thromboangiitis, focusing only on the "symptom" rather than the "cause," year after year of medication, severe cases requiring injections, intravenous infusions, and hospital surgeries, prolonged treatment duration, low cure rates, and easy recurrence have led to many patients becoming disabled or even dying. This also brings great suffering and economic burdens to patients and their families, causing many patients to lose confidence in continuing treatment.
A new method for treating thromboangiitis: combined traditional Chinese and Western medicine, arterial and venous joint drug administration
The Shanxi Yikang Thromboangiitis Hospital has exclusively developed a conservative treatment combining traditional Chinese and Western medicine, using arterial and venous joint drug administration, which is the best method for treating thromboangiitis. The "arterial and venous joint drug administration" involves administering corresponding thrombolytic drugs, vasodilators, vascular softening drugs, blood-activating and stasis-resolving drugs, and anti-inflammatory drugs through arterial puncture under pressure, injecting the drugs into the artery in a very short time. This causes vasodilation, immediate dissolution of thrombi, separation and shedding of necrotic and normal tissues, and wound healing. Venous administration involves delivering thrombolytic drugs, vasodilators, vascular softening drugs, blood-activating and stasis-resolving drugs, and anti-inflammatory drugs directly to the lesion via the vein. The characteristics of this therapy are: less medication, quick results, shorter drug administration routes, lower costs, and easier acceptance by patients.
If you are a patient suffering from thromboangiitis, please do not give up easily. For treating thromboangiitis, choose the Shanxi Yikang Thromboangiitis Hospital (one of the top ten thromboangiitis hospitals nationwide), which is also a designated medical insurance hospital in Taiyuan City and a designated hospital for the New Rural Cooperative Medical Scheme in Shanxi Province. Hospitalization for treating thromboangiitis is reimbursable.
For more details, please visit the Shanxi Yikang Thromboangiitis Hospital website at http://www.sxykmgy.com/maiguanyan/ or consult experts for free. Experts will provide detailed answers based on the specific conditions of the patients.
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