Hideous varicose vein legs
missionpossible2013
Posts: 20 Member
I started developing varicose veins when i had constant standing working at a fast food restaurant. Throughout the years they have only gotten worse. I HATE for my legs to show. It's embarrassing to have them out. I went to a vein center in my home town . They offered out patient surgery. They also said i had an extra vein that i didn't need that caused the other veins to varicose. Has anyone here delt with bulging varicose veins and was successful?
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Curious about this also! I was referred for treatment but never went through with it. I use Sally Hansen's "Airbrush legs" spray when I wear anything short which helps. I am not very overweight at all, but I got the veins during pregnancy. My mom was the same, she had hers treated but then they all came back (this was in the late 1980's...assuming treatments are better now?)2
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No, but before you try OP surgery; there is an oral pill that was developed to help with hemorrhoids & one of the side effects was the decrease appearance of varicose veins; I forgot the name of it, I’ll ask my husband tomorrow & let u know, we were discussing it a few months back1
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Also, I don't know where you are in the world (guessing not the UK as you can't get surgery that easily here!) but wearing compression hosiery/stockings can help to reduce the size of them. They assist with venous return by applying graduated compression on the leg creating resistance for the calf muscle (which in essence is a pump for venous return) and helping compensate against the bulging nature of varicose veins.
In the U.K. These are first line treatement for prevention and reduction of varicose veins as surgery is often not cost effective.1 -
I went to an outpatient surgery center and had them taken care of in 2011. Doctor said Mine got bad from waitressing and pregnancy but it's likely hereditary for me( my mom and my grandma and had it too)
I don't regret having it done, my legs look 98% better. It was not expensive and no pain.
I believe women should do whatever they want to make themselves feel better about their appearance. I've had breast augmentation and several facial procedures in the past 21 years.
Out of everything, teeth whitening caused me the most pain. Lol . I won't do that again, it really hurt and made my teeth extremely sensitive. But everything else is fair game in my book.4 -
Vasculera2
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Serious question are varicose veins dangerous? I don't have any but some family members do. Just wondering.1
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My great uncle had the surgery and wished he'd done it sooner.0
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jefamer2017 wrote: »Serious question are varicose veins dangerous? I don't have any but some family members do. Just wondering.
They can be. They could burst open and bleed, cause ulcers, and have blood clots.
I have varicose veins, had them for decades. The only bother I ever get from them is rare itching. My GP prescribed compression stockings, but they were painfully tight and were doing the opposite of what they're said to do (my feet would go numb when I sat down for more than a couple minutes).2 -
missionpossible2013 wrote: »I started developing varicose veins when i had constant standing working at a fast food restaurant. Throughout the years they have only gotten worse. I HATE for my legs to show. It's embarrassing to have them out. I went to a vein center in my home town . They offered out patient surgery. They also said i had an extra vein that i didn't need that caused the other veins to varicose. Has anyone here delt with bulging varicose veins and was successful?
Cynosure has a laser called Cynergy that has minimal down time and really does a number on those spider veins. Mine weren't severe, but I got them treated and it was really simple, non-painful and now I have fresh legs instead of unsightly veins on my "saddle bag" area1 -
I am 29 and have spider veins that will probably get worse as I get older. My mom had that surgery thing done. So far they aren’t bothering me but we shall see.0
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jefamer2017 wrote: »Serious question are varicose veins dangerous? I don't have any but some family members do. Just wondering.
They can be. They could burst open and bleed, cause ulcers, and have blood clots.
I have varicose veins, had them for decades. The only bother I ever get from them is rare itching. My GP prescribed compression stockings, but they were painfully tight and were doing the opposite of what they're said to do (my feet would go numb when I sat down for more than a couple minutes).
In addition to this, if you have them in a place where you bump them on things it's easy for them to get ulcerated. Mostly they are just unattractive though.
My spider veins disappeared with my weight loss. Yay! But now I am getting varicose veins in the leg I injured with the ruptured Baker's cyst, due to swelling.0 -
jefamer2017 wrote: »Serious question are varicose veins dangerous? I don't have any but some family members do. Just wondering.
They can be. They could burst open and bleed, cause ulcers, and have blood clots.
I have varicose veins, had them for decades. The only bother I ever get from them is rare itching. My GP prescribed compression stockings, but they were painfully tight and were doing the opposite of what they're said to do (my feet would go numb when I sat down for more than a couple minutes).
I’d say they gave you the wrong size stockings then. I work in a leg ulcer clinic and measure people for hosiery everyday and they definitely shouldn’t be doing that to you! Some people don’t fit into the regular size bands (being tall with larger legs, short with skinny legs etc all issues for bog standard sizing) and require made to measure to get the perfect fit.
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I had the surgery back in 2006 on my right leg. The laser treatment didn't work on me, so they stripped my vein. That was a little painful! Within a few years, I got other spider veins and a new snakey varicose vein. It hasn't hurt or throbbed like the old one but I notice my right leg tires easier.0
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I had surgery in December, my surgeon said other treatments were not suitable for me. One vein striped and 25+ small incisions to remove the one across my thigh that went down to my shin.
Took some recovery time but worth it.
I have visible scarring that is reducing. The main thing is that I feel comfortable wearing shorts and skirts now when before I was too self conscious of the massive veins.1 -
When I was researching treatments for broken capillaries, I came across mention of topical treatments on the market containing horse chestnut extract, which has apparently been shown to help with varicose veins in clinical trials. Source.1
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I’ve read that varicose and spider veins are a lack of vitamin E. Not sure if it’s true but I take vitamin E every day and load up on high E foods like almonds and sunflower seeds. Although I’ve never had a problem with varicose veins.5
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TheDevastator wrote: »I’ve read that varicose and spider veins are a lack of vitamin E. Not sure if it’s true but I take vitamin E every day and load up on high E foods like almonds and sunflower seeds. Although I’ve never had a problem with varicose veins.
I sort of doubt a vitamin can overcome the effects of genetics, being overweight, multiple pregnancies, and having a job where a person is on their feet all day, which is what the Mayo clinic lists as risk factors (oh, and being a woman)2 -
TheDevastator wrote: »I’ve read that varicose and spider veins are a lack of vitamin E. Not sure if it’s true but I take vitamin E every day and load up on high E foods like almonds and sunflower seeds. Although I’ve never had a problem with varicose veins.
I sort of doubt a vitamin can overcome the effects of genetics, being overweight, multiple pregnancies, and having a job where a person is on their feet all day, which is what the Mayo clinic lists as risk factors (oh, and being a woman)
Well not just one vitamin but the full spectrum of vitamins and minerals every day. You might have to take high doses of vitamin E for a while to get back to normal.5 -
TheDevastator wrote: »TheDevastator wrote: »I’ve read that varicose and spider veins are a lack of vitamin E. Not sure if it’s true but I take vitamin E every day and load up on high E foods like almonds and sunflower seeds. Although I’ve never had a problem with varicose veins.
I sort of doubt a vitamin can overcome the effects of genetics, being overweight, multiple pregnancies, and having a job where a person is on their feet all day, which is what the Mayo clinic lists as risk factors (oh, and being a woman)
Well not just one vitamin but the full spectrum of vitamins and minerals every day. You might have to take high doses of vitamin E for a while to get back to normal.
*sigh*7 -
Thanks. Many of you have way better solutions than what I was considering. I need to go back to the doctor. They are getting worse faster, with weight loss.0
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The upside is that this is normally only cosmetic and poses no health risk. There are a few approved cosmetic procedures you can research. I would steer clear of sclerotherapy on larger veins as the risk is dramatically increased. I used to manage the safety profile on one of the first products (polidocanol) and found far too many doctors using this off-label with horrible adverse effects. Used per the label on small spider veins < 1mm it was wonderful and minimized the scarring effect.
This is primarily genetic, but certain activities can aggravate it.1
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