Superficial vein products Healthcare professionals

  

VenaSeal™ Closure System

VenaSeal closure system components on white background

Reach new lengths and treat more diseased veins with VenaSeal™ closure system. The VenaSeal™ closure system delivers immediate and lasting vein closure with its proprietary medical adhesive formula, with a demonstrated 94.6% closure rate at 5 years.1-5

Indications, Safety, and Warnings

Product Details

ClosureFast™ Radiofrequency Ablation System

ClosureFast radiofrequency ablation system

The ClosureFast™ procedure uses radiofrequency energy to treat patients with superficial vein disease. Its segmental approach features an overlap of 0.5 cm at each treatment segment, designed to eliminate gaps in treatment.

Indications, Safety, and Warnings

Product Details

References

1

Morrison N, Gibson K, McEnroe S, et al. Randomized trial comparing cyanoacrylate embolization and radiofrequency ablation for incompetent great saphenous veins (VeClose). J Vasc Surg. April 2015;61(4):985–994.

2

Proebstle T, Alm J, Dimitri S, et al. Three-year follow-up results of the prospective European Multicenter Cohort Study on Cyanoacrylate Embolization for treatment of refluxing great saphenous veins. J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord. March 2021;9(2):329–334.

3

Gibson K, Ferris B. Cyanoacrylate closure of incompetent great, small and accessory saphenous veins without the use of post-procedure compression: Initial outcomes of a post-market evaluation of the VenaSeal System (the WAVES Study). Vascular. April 2017;25(2):149–156.

4

Almeida JI, Javier JJ, Mackay EG, Bautista C, Cher DJ, Proebstle TM. Thirty-sixth month follow-up of first-in-human use of cyanoacrylate adhesive for treatment of saphenous vein incompetence. J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord. September 2017;5(5):658–666.

5

Morrison N, Gibson K, Vasquez M, Weiss R, Jones A. Five-year extension study of patients from a randomized clinical trial (VeClose) comparing cyanoacrylate closure versus radiofrequency ablation for the treatment of incompetent great saphenous veins. J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord. November 2020;8(6):978–989.