Varicose veins - what is it?

Many people consider varicose veins to be a cosmetic problem. Spider veins or protruding veins make your legs look unsightly, but they also warn of more serious health problems. Noticing signs of varicose veins in a timely manner, carrying out treatment and preventing relapses is the main task for those who want to maintain health and maintain the beauty of their legs for as long as possible.

signs of varicose veins

What are varicose veins

Answering this question, many will say that the main sign of varicose veins is unsightly, protruding veins. This occurs due to the fact that the vein wall expands, stretches, and the vessel loses its tone. Indeed, dilated veins are the main manifestation of varicose veins, but why does this happen?

Blood flows through the veins from bottom to top. In this case, the leg muscles play the role of a kind of pump: by contracting, they "lift" the blood through the vein to the heart. But if during the day you mostly sit and move little, then the muscles contract poorly, and the mechanism that helps blood rise through the vein fails. The blood in the vessel stagnates, which creates the precondition for the development of varicose veins.

The second important mechanism that ensures normal blood flow through the veins of the legs is the presence of valves in the walls of the veins. Normally, they close and prevent blood from flowing from top to bottom. If the valves weaken, reflux occurs - back flow of blood. As a result, it stagnates and stretches the vessel. Losing tone, the venous wall expands, and the vessel can no longer perform its function 100%. This condition is called varicose veins.

Thus, varicose veins are a consequence of weakening of the venous valves, which begin to allow blood to flow in the opposite direction, which leads to its stagnation. Varicose veins most often affect the superficial veins of the legs. The affected veins are clearly visible under the skin and appear knotty and tortuous.

What factors influence the formation of varicose veins

Risk factors influencing the development of varicose veins can be divided into several groups:

  • Long-term load on the vascular wall - this can be a monotonous load (forced sitting or standing during the day), as well as high loads associated with lifting weights (for example, among athletes).
  • Hormonal imbalances that affect the condition of the venous valves. That is why varicose veins often accompany pregnancy, and teenagers and young people who are actively undergoing hormonal changes are also at risk. Varicose veins also threaten women taking hormonal contraceptives.
  • Heredity. The vascular wall includes so-called structural proteins - collagen and elastin. Their ratio ensures the elasticity of the vein. A person may have a congenital disorder in the ratio of these proteins, which leads to weakness of the venous wall. This determines the congenital predisposition to varicose veins.

Pay attention to the following points: the presence of varicose veins in close relatives, the presence or absence of hormonal fluctuations (taking contraceptives and other hormonal drugs, pregnancy, breastfeeding), a sufficient level of physical activity during the day.

Why are varicose veins dangerous?

In the absence of timely diagnosis and correct treatment, varicose veins in the later stages can cause the development of such severe complications as:

  • rupture of a dilated vein followed by massive bleeding;
  • phlebitis - inflammation of the vessel wall;
  • thrombophlebitis - an inflammatory process of the vascular wall with the formation of a blood clot (thrombus) on its inner surface;
  • thrombosis - blocking the lumen of a vein with a blood clot, which impairs blood flow;
  • thromboembolism - a condition in which a blood clot breaks away from the site of its formation and is transported with circulating blood to other structures of the body, blocking smaller vessels and causing ischemia;
  • trophic ulcers are long-term non-healing wounds on the skin of the legs, resulting from impaired blood circulation and tissue trophism.

Many complications are difficult to treat, significantly reduce a person’s quality of life and can lead to irreversible consequences.

Varicose veins: what to look for

So, varicose veins are one of the most common vascular pathologies. Many of us, especially office workers, are at risk. To understand whether it’s time for you to see a phlebologist, answer a few questions:

  • Do your feet swell at the end of the day? Do you feel heaviness, pain, or do you have leg cramps at night?
  • How much time during the day do you spend in the same position - sitting or standing?
  • Have your relatives suffered from varicose veins?
  • Do spider veins and tortuous red capillaries appear on your legs?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, we advise you to visit a doctor. In a specialized medical center that treats varicose veins, you can undergo an ultrasound diagnostic (it takes about 20 minutes), which will identify varicose veins, if any, or allow you to assess the risks of its development. A phlebologist will give recommendations on effective prevention or treatment.

What to do if varicose veins appear

After the phlebologist has diagnosed varicose veins, he selects treatment tactics taking into account the stage of the disease and the severity of clinical symptoms. Therapeutic measures can combine conservative, medicinal and surgical techniques.  

As part of conservative therapy, the following is prescribed:

  • dietary nutrition to improve the rheological properties of blood, strengthen the vascular wall, prevent edema, normalize digestion processes, reduce body weight (if necessary);
  • wearing compression garments of a certain compression class (stockings, socks or tights).

Also, as part of a comprehensive treatment, the doctor may recommend external remedies to eliminate signs of the disease. They are available in the form of ointments, gels, creams and are divided into three large groups:

  • phlebotonics (venotonics) - improve the tone of the walls of blood vessels, as a result of which dilated veins return to their original state;
  • heparin - reduce blood viscosity, reduce the risk of blood clots, increase blood flow;
  • anti-inflammatory - help eliminate inflammation and pain.

The basis of drug therapy is phlebotropic drugs. Such substances improve the outflow of lymphatic fluid, blood microcirculation, reduce the permeability of vascular walls, and increase their tone.

The gold standard for treating varicose veins is non-surgical methods. They make it possible to stop the progression of the pathological process, block blood flow in damaged veins, eliminate unpleasant symptoms of the disease, and also restore the aesthetics of the legs without scars and long-term rehabilitation.

The modern phlebology center uses all modern treatment methods:

  1. Sclerotherapy. A modern procedure for removing varicose veins by injecting them with a special substance - sclerosant. With the help of such a drug, the dilated vessel "sticks together" and is then switched off from the general blood flow, and the blood begins to circulate through healthy veins.
  2. Laser and radiofrequency vein removal. Both methods are similar; they are based on thermal damage to the venous wall, as a result of which it "seals", turns into a scar, and then resolves. The procedures are full-fledged alternatives to classical operations and are performed under ultrasound guidance. This makes it possible to act only on pathological lesions without damaging healthy tissue.
  3. In cases where surgery is necessary, the clinic performs gentle, minimally invasive operations: phlebectomy, miniphlebectomy, stripping, crossectomy. They are applicable almost always, even in difficult cases.

Quite often a combined approach is used in the treatment of varicose veins. For example, large dilated veins are switched off from the bloodstream using radiofrequency and laser treatment, and smaller superficial vessels with tributaries are switched off through sclerotherapy. In this case, conservative therapy is carried out simultaneously.