Varicose veins (patient information)

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Varicose veins

Overview

What are the symptoms?

What are the causes?

Who is at highest risk?

When to seek urgent medical care?

Diagnosis

Treatment options

Where to find medical care for Varicose veins?

What to expect (Outlook/Prognosis)?

Possible complications

Prevention

Varicose veins On the Web

Ongoing Trials at Clinical Trials.gov

Images of Varicose veins

Videos on Varicose veins

FDA on Varicose veins

CDC on Varicose veins

Varicose veins in the news

Blogs on Varicose veins

Directions to Hospitals Treating Varicose veins

Risk calculators and risk factors for Varicose veins

For the WikiDoc page for this topic, click here

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Varicose veins are swollen, twisted, and sometimes painful veins that have filled with an abnormal collection of blood.

What are the symptoms of Varicose veins?

  • Fullness, heaviness, aching, and sometimes pain in the legs
  • Visible, enlarged veins
  • Mild swelling of ankles
  • Brown discoloration of the skin at the ankles
  • Skin ulcers near the ankle (this is more often seen in severe cases)

What causes Varicose veins?

In normal veins, valves in the vein keep blood moving forward toward the heart. With varicose veins, the valves do not function properly, allowing blood to remain in the vein. Pooling of blood in a vein causes it to enlarge.

This process usually occurs in the veins of the legs, although it may occur elsewhere. Varicose veins are common, affecting mostly women.

Causes include:

  • Defective valves from birth (congenitally defective valves)
  • Pregnancy
  • Thrombophlebitis

Primary varicose veins occur because of congenitally defective valves, or without a known cause. Secondary varicose veins occur because of another condition, such as when a pregnant woman develops varicose veins.

Who is at highest risk?

Standing for a long time and having increased pressure in the abdomen may make you more likely to develop varicose veins, or may make the condition worse.

When to seek urgent medical care?

Call for an appointment with your health care provider if:

  • Varicose veins are painful
  • They get worse or do not improve with self-treatment, such as keeping the legs elevated or avoiding excessive standing
  • Complications occur, including a sudden increase in pain or swelling, fever, redness of the leg, or leg ulcers

Diagnosis

The diagnosis is mainly based on the appearance of the leg veins when you are standing or seated with the legs dangling.

At times a physician may order a duplex ultrasound exam of the extremity to see blood flow in the veins, and to rule out other disorders of the legs (such as a blood clot). Rarely, an angiogram of the legs may be performed to rule out other disorders.

Treatment options

Treatment is usually conservative. You will be asked to avoid excessive standing, raise your legs when resting or sleeping, and wear elastic support hose.

You may need surgery or nonsurgical treatment for:

  • Leg pain, often described as heavy or tired
  • Skin ulcers or sores that are caused by poor blood flow through the veins
  • Improving the appearance of the legs
  • Lipodermatosclerosis - fatty tissue under that skin that hardens over time, caused by high blood pressure in a vein

Vein stripping is surgery to remove varicose veins in the legs. It is usually reserved for patients who are having a lot of pain or who have skin ulcers.

Noninvasive treatments for varicose veins do not involve surgery. Examples are:

Where to find medical care for Varicose veins?

Directions to Hospitals Treating Varicose veins

What to expect (Outlook/Prognosis)?

Varicose veins tend to get worse over time. You can ease discomfort and slow varicose vein progression with self care.

Possible complications

  • Phlebitis (chronic inflammation of the vein)
  • Formation of leg ulcers
  • Rupture of a varicose vein

Prevention of Varicose veins

Avoid prolonged standing if personal or family history indicates you are at risk of developing varicose veins.

Sources

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/001109.htm Template:WH Template:WS