Varicose veins are enlarged veins that develop due to weak or damaged valves within the veins that fail to prevent the backflow of blood. They appear twisted, bulged, blue, red, or flesh-colored and usually occur in the lower extremities.
Varicosities are usually seen in the veins near the skin's surface. Long hours of sitting or standing can cause increased pressure on the valves within the veins that may weaken them leading to the pooling of blood in the leg veins. This further raises the pressure causing the veins to stretch resulting in a tortuous, bulging appearance.
This is a noninvasive diagnostic that evaluates blood flow through the veins using sound waves. Leg ultrasonography can assist in the detection of a blood clot.
This is a combination of duplex ultrasound and traditional ultrasound tests to evaluate blood flow and the anatomy of the leg veins.
Your doctor will inject a special dye into your legs and take X-rays of the area during this exam. The dye appears on X-rays, allowing your doctor to see how your blood is flowing through the veins.
Wearing compression stockings can reduce the symptoms. These stretchy stockings provide support to vein walls and keep them from expanding to some degree. When compression stockings are worn every day, they can be quite effective.
A salt (saline) or chemical solution is injected into the varicose veins during this procedure. Varicose veins that have been treated should diminish in a few weeks.
The laser treatment sends powerful bursts of light into the vein, causing it to diminish and dissolve over time. No cuts or needles are used.
Varicose veins can be treated using lasers or radiofrequency energy. A catheter is used to inject a small fiber into a varicose vein. The laser or radiofrequency energy is used to deliver heat that destroys the wall of the varicose vein.
This method entails tying off a vein before it connects to a deep vein and then removing it using small skin incisions. This is an outpatient procedure for most people. The removal of the vein will not stop blood from flowing in the leg since blood circulation will continue through veins deeper in the leg.
Smaller varicose veins are removed by a series of microscopic skin punctures in this treatment. In this outpatient procedure, only the areas of the leg that are being poked are numbed.