Varicose Veins

There are two sets of veins within the leg, deep or femoral veins near the bones within the muscles and superficial or saphenous veins which are just under the skin.

The saphenous veins join the femoral veins at various points along the leg. Most of the blood flowing back towards the heart is carried by the femoral veins with very little blood flowing in the superficial veins.

When a person is standing the blood must therefore flow uphill towards the heart. As muscles in the legs contract, they squeeze the femoral veins and thus push the blood up the leg. As the muscles relax, blood is prevented from flowing back down the leg by the action of valves within the veins. The combined action of the muscles and the valves keeps blood flowing up the leg.

Problems with these valves can lead to venous reflux and varicose veins. Venous reflux is where the valves in the veins and at the junctions between veins have failed and are not functioning properly, thus allowing blood to fall the wrong way down the leg, i.e. back down towards the feet. This back pressure damages valves further down the leg and stretches the veins under the skin; manifesting as varicose veins.

According to a study by CJ Evans et al in 1999, varicose veins are present in approximately 1 in 3 adults in the Western world. Venous reflux problems are also somewhat hereditary, in that if you have one parent with a history of venous problems, then you have a 50% chance of suffering yourself, two parents and the likelihood rises to 80%. Additionally men tend to have more vascular problems than women. Pregnancy and weight gain can indeed make vascular problems appear worse but they are generally not factors for actually making the problem worse in itself.

Traditional treatment for venous reflux or varicose veins is ligation or tying of the great or small saphenous veins and stripping them from the leg. As well as being painful, this also leads to the veins growing back again in the majority of cases and is not considered the best option for treatment nowadays.

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Treatments For Varicose Veins

Endovenous Laser Ablation (EVLA/EVLT) Thumbnail

Endovenous Laser Ablation (EVLA/EVLT)

Endovenous Laser Ablation (EVLA), also referred to as Endovenous Laser Treatment (EVLT) is a minimally invasive method of treating varicose veins.


Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) for Varicose Veins Thumbnail

Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) for Varicose Veins

Radiofrequency Ablation or RF Ablation (RFA) is a form of Endovenous Thermal Ablation or Endothermal Ablation (ETA) used to treat varicose veins.


Sclerotherapy and Microsclerotherapy Thumbnail

Sclerotherapy and Microsclerotherapy

Sclerotherapy was developed for treating varicose veins. Microsclerotherapy is a technique of injecting thread veins with a sclerosant that causes swelling in the vein’s wall which destroys it.