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Varicose Veins During Pregnancy

Varicose veins are swollen veins that may bulge near the surface of the skin. These sometimes squiggly, blue or purple veins are most likely to show up in your legs, though you may also get them in your vulva or elsewhere. (In fact, hemorrhoids are really just varicose veins of the rectal area.)

Varicose Veins During Pregnancy

Varicose Veins During Pregnancy

Many women first develop varicose veins or find that they get worse during pregnancy. As your uterus grows, it puts pressure on the large vein on the right side of your body (the inferior vena cava), which in turn increases pressure in the leg veins. Veins are the blood vessels that return blood from your extremities to your heart, so the blood in your leg veins is already working against gravity.

The amount of blood in your body increases when you’re pregnant, adding to the burden on your veins. And your progesterone levels rise, causing the walls of your blood vessels to relax.

You’re more likely to get varicose veins if other members of your family have had them. They’re much more common in women than men, and if you have them, they tend to get worse with each successive pregnancy and as you get older. Being overweight, carrying twins or higher multiples, and standing for long periods can also make you more susceptible.

The good news is that varicose veins tend to improve after you give birth, particularly if you didn’t have any before you got pregnant. And if they don’t get better, there are a variety of ways to treat them.

What can I do to prevent or minimize them?

You may be able to prevent them or at least minimize them. Here are some tips:

• Exercise daily. Even just a brisk walk around the block can help your circulation.

• Strive to keep within the recommended weight range for your stage of pregnancy.

• Elevate your feet and legs whenever possible. Use a stool or box to rest your legs on when you’re sitting, and keep your feet elevated on a pillow when you’re lying down. Don’t cross your legs or ankles when sitting. Don’t sit or stand for long periods without taking breaks to move around.

• Sleep on your left side with your feet on a pillow. Wedge a pillow behind your back to keep yourself tilted to the left. Since the inferior vena cava is on the right side, lying on your left side relieves the vein of the weight of the uterus, thus decreasing pressure on the veins in your legs and feet.

• Wear special support hose. Prescription-strength hose, known as graduated-compression stockings, work best and are available from medical supply stores and pharmacies. These stockings are twice as thick as normal pantyhose. Tight at the ankle, they get looser as they go up the leg, making it easier for blood to flow back up toward your heart. As a result, they help prevent swelling and may keep your varicose veins from getting worse. Put them on before getting out of bed in the morning, while you’re still lying down, to prevent blood from pooling in your legs, and keep them on all day. These support hose may be bothersome, especially in hot weather, but bad varicose veins can be more uncomfortable

Why Vein Problems Are Worse For Women

Life is definitely not always fair for the fairer sex.

The unwelcome truth is that spider veins and varicose veins mostly happen to women. It’s not exclusively the case but generally speaking – as a woman you’re more likely to get problems with vein weakness than a man is. And the reasons lie at the very root of your femininity – the female hormone estrogen.

Varicose Veins - Why They're Worse For Women

Varicose Veins - Why They're Worse For Women

If you think about it – the veins in your legs are some of the longest in the human body. So your blood has to go on quite a journey back to the heart and for many people most of the time this doesn’t present a problem.

Your leg veins are well equipped to get the blood you need back to your heart. The human body truly is an amazing thing. Because leg veins need to be so long they come with a series of tiny valves – up to 20 depending on how long your legs are. These minute valves control the flow of blood from your legs back to your heart.

It’s a bit like the locks in a canal – the blood is allowed to collect at various points – and then move on when your body is ready.

Unfortunately for some of us – these little valves can become faulty – so blood that was making its way up to your heart trickles back down. Over time sections of your veins can swell as the excess blood starts to collect.

Pregnancy adds to the strain. Your body goes into overdrive – pumping out a huge amount of hormones into your body and increasing the amount of blood moving through your veins by as much as 20 percent. The result – overworked and weakened valves.

The weight of your growing baby also has an impact making it more difficult for the blood traveling back to your heart to get there – and even more likely that some of it will simply accumulate in your legs.

And – wouldn’t you just know it – age makes things worse. Some of us get to our fiftieth birthdays without so much as one spider vein or varicose vein in sight – only to suddenly start experiencing problems.

The reasons are not entirely clear but it has something to do with the fact that as you get older your blood vessels can lose some elasticity and bounce.

The causes of spider veins and varicose veins are many and varied – but some of it has to do with the simple fact of being born a woman.

Varicose Veins – Pigs in China

Updated Wednesday, September 17, 2008 11:23 am

Varicose vein treatment eases hunger in pigs

WASHINGTON — A treatment for varicose veins helped cut the appetites of healthy, growing pigs and might offer a less radical alternative to weight-loss surgery for obese people, U.S. researchers reported on Tuesday.

They injected a chemical into blood vessels supplying a very specific part of the stomach to cut off production of the hunger hormone ghrelin.

It made the pigs eat less, and tests showed their bodies were producing as much as 60 percent less ghrelin, they reported in the journal Radiology.

“With gastric artery chemical embolization, called GACE, there’s no major surgery,” Dr. Aravind Arepally of the John Hopkins University School of Medicine, who led the study, said in a statement.

“In our study in pigs, this procedure produced an effect similar to bariatric surgery by suppressing ghrelin levels and subsequently lowering appetite.”

Bringing 1.800.VARICOSE to North America

PRESS RELEASE INFORMATION

Varicose and spider veins are venous issues which impact millions of North Americans.  1.800.VARICOSE and www.1800varicose.com is a connection and online directory helping people with varicose and spider vein issues.

Arv Reddy

Launch of New Vein Blog

Today we launch the new vein blog. Come back soon!