Varicose Veins Overview
Varicose veins are rope like, enlarged veins. Most varicose veins are twisted and gnarled. They can be classified into the following 4 types.
Risk Factors
| Female |
| Aging |
| Family |
| Pregnancy and Delivery |
| Jobs that require standing such as: teachers, hair stylists, cooks, nurses and flight attendants. |
Frequency
10% of females over the age of 40 experience obvious symptoms. Including mild variations, varicose veins affect 43% of over 15 and 62% of over 30 of both females and males.
Major Symptoms
- Cosmetically unattractive
- Most patients visit clinics for cosmetic concerns, such as visible bulging, twisting veins that are visually unattractive.
- Tired, heavy, dullness or burning sensation
- Reflux of blood causes pooling of blood and venous high pressure, resulting in those symptoms.
- Pain
- Pooling of blood sometimes causes pains.
- Cramping
- Some patients experience leg cramps at night/when walking.
- Swelling
- Venous hypertension sometimes causes water leakages from veins, resulting in swelling.
- Itching
- Itching with/without eczema sometimes occurs.
- Ulcer and darkness of skin
- Enlarged veins and skins around the area cause bleeding, resulgting in ulcer and darkness of skin. Once ulcers are made, they grow easily and take a long time to cure because of the bad blood circulation.
Causes
Treatment options
- 1. Non-invasive, Basic Treatment
- Elevate legs at bedtime. Regular exercise, avoid standing for a long-time. Wear compression stockings. This treatment will not cure nor eliminate existing vein problems. However, this will help slow the progression of the disease and alleviate symptoms.
- 2. Sclerotherapy
- Sclerotherapy is an injection of a solution (sclerosant) into the varicose vein and scar the inside lining of the vein. This causes the vein to close.
The procedure is an outpatient therapy that takes 10 to 15 minutes. Sclerotherapy is effective only for spider veins and some moderately-sized bulging veins but sometimes there can be a relapse. Temporary bruising or pigmentation change or staining at the injection sites can occur.
- 3. High ligation
- In most cases, varicose veins occur when the valves are damaged. Surgical ligation is generally done to isolate the damaged valves. The vein is first tied off (ligated) by tying a small stitch around it to block blood flow. If only one valve in the ligated region is damaged, the ligated vein may be left in place. Sometimes this procedure is done with sclerotherapy.
- 4. Stripping
- When numerous valves in a vein are damaged, the damaged vein must be stripped or removed. To strip a vein, an incision is made below the damaged vein and the vein is grasped and surgically removed. Most people are able to return to their normal daily and recreational activities within a few weeks. Some common side effects from vein stripping surgery may include temporary pain or discomfort, bruising, hematoma, numbness, and less frequently, infection. Vein stripping is an invasive procedure and should not be performed on older individuals for whom surgery poses a risk due to other medical conditions.
- 5. Stripping surgery with local anesthesia
- tripping surgery is very painful, therefore, full anesthesia is generally used, while local anesthesia can also be applied using specific anesthesia such as intravenous anesthesia or LA anesthesia. Patients who undergo this surgery are able to go home the same day, but limited clinics/hospitals offer this surgery.
- 6. The Radiofrequency (RF) procedure
- This procedure, known as VENUSTM, was developed in the US a little before the EVLT. A special devise is positioned in the treatment vein and radiofrequency energy is then transmitted from the devise, heating the vein wall up to 85 degrees which causes contraction of the vein wall resulting in the closing down of the veins. This procedure is invasive and effective, although inserting the device is complicated and the surgery is expensive. As of Feb 2005, no clinic in Japan provides this treatment. The RF treatment, as well as EVLT, is not covered by health insurance.

















