Oct 19

Varicose Veins

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Varicose Veins & Spider Veins

Skin Problems Slideshow

Medical Author: Siamak Nabili, MD, MPH
Medical Editor: Melissa Conrad Stöppler, MD

  • What are veins and what is their function?
  • What are varicose veins and spider veins?
  • Who gets varicose and spider veins?
  • What causes varicose and spider veins?
  • What are varicose vein symptoms?
  • How are varicose veins evaluated (diagnosed)?
  • What treatments are available for varicose veins and spider veins?
  • How can compression stockings help with varicose veins?
  • What is sclerotherapy?
  • What surgical procedures are available to treat varicose veins?
  • Can laser be used to treat varicose and spider veins?
  • What type of doctors provide treatments for varicose and spider veins?
  • What are the side goods of these treatments?
  • How can varicose vein be prevented?
  • Varicose Veins At A Glance


What are veins and what is their function?

Veins are blood vessels that return blood from wholly the organs in the body toward the heart. When the different organs use oxygen from the blood to perform their functions, they release the used blood containing waste products (such as carbon dioxide) into the veins. Blood in the veins is afterward transported to the heart and returned to the lungs, where the waste carbon dioxide is released and more oxygen is loaded by the blood and taken back to the rest of the body by the arteries.

Veins also act as a storage for unused blood. When the body is at rest, only a portion of the available blood in the body circulates. The rest of the blood remains inactive in the veins and enters the active circulation when the body becomes more active and needs the supplementary blood to carry oxygen to entire body. This storing capacity is due to the elasticity (flexibility to expand) of the walls of the veins.

Veins have different sizes depending their location and their function. The largest veins are in the center of the body; these collect the blood from all the other smaller veins and channel it into the heart. The branches of these large veins generate smaller and smaller as they move away from the center of the body. The veins closer to the skin surface are called superficial veins. The veins that are deeper and closer to the center of the body are called deep veins. There are also other veins that connect the superficial veins to the deep ones which are called the perforating veins.


What are varicose veins and spider veins?

Veins can bulge with pools of blood when they fail to circulate the blood properly. These visible and bulging veins, called varicose veins, are more common in the legs and thighs, but can develop anywhere in the body.

Large varicose veins can be visible, bulging, palpable (can subsist felt by the agency of touching), long, and dilated (greater than 4 millimeters in diameter).

Small “spider veins” also have existence possible to appear upon the body the skin’s surface. These may take heed like short, fine lines, “starburst” clusters, or a web-like maze. They are typically not palpable. Spider veins are most common in the thighs, ankles, and feet. They may also appear on the face. The medical term for them spider veins is telangiectasias.

Picture of Varicose Veins

Picture of Spider Veins

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  • Varicose Veins Index
  • Glossary



Next: Who gets varicose and spider veins? »

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