Varicose Veins not just your Grandma’s problem

Vein News Video

 

varicose veins largeMore than 40 million people in the U.S. have varicose veins. And contrary to popular belief, it’s not just your grandma’s problem. The swollen, twisted veins can strike anyone at any age and it can lead to serious medical issues.

At age 29, Andreas Garcia doesn’t fit the profile for someone with varicose veins.

“Never thought of it. It was just, oh my grandma had it. Okay, all old people have it. So it never really occurred that it would happen to me.”

His first symptoms began at age 25 when his legs became tired, achy and heavy, but he didn’t think much of it until they started to swell.

“My leg just started getting bigger and bigger, and then pain,” he explained.

Dr. Heather Hall, vascular surgeon at Weiss Memorial Hospital in Chicago, says Andreas is not alone. Of the 40 million people in the U.S. who have varicose veins, 25 percent of them are men.

“So this is not a small problem. This is actually a very, very common problem,” he said.

One that’s not just cosmetic. Andres’ veins got so bad he developed ulcers on both legs.

That’s when he took action and met with Dr. Hall for surgery.

“The blood flow should be from the feet towards the head. But in him since his saphenous vein is not working, the blood flow is actually going down the leg or refluxing,” Dr. Hall explained.

Dr. Hall first treated Andreas’ wounds and then used lasers to remove and seal shut the varicose veins.

It’s a quick, noninvasive surgery that put Andrea’s back on his feet again.

Andreas had the veins on his left side removed and is getting ready to have surgery on the right side. He’s not sure why he developed them, but statistics show if both of your parents have varicose veins, you have a 90 percent chance of developing them. If one parent is affected, you have a 40 to 50 percent chance of developing them.

Check out this story on KING5.com:

Vein News Video

Vein News Video

 

New Treatment for Facial Pain and Migraine Headaches-Now being offered at AI3

Getting serious about blocking pain.

Currently there is very little to offer the chronic headache patient. Nearly two thirds of patients discontinue prescription medications due to inadequate relief and side-effects.

Today, establishing an SPG block has never been easier. The patented SphenoCath® offers the practitioner the ability to offer a first-line treatment to the chronic headache patient. The SphenoCath® delivers medication that can sustain pain relief in a 15 minute procedure that is comfortable and quick. With the SphenoCath® an SPG block may be achieved without needles, cotton swabs, atomizer sprays, or systemic narcotics.

SPG block stands for sphenopalatine ganglion block. The sphenopalatine ganglion is a collection of nerve cells located just under the tissue lining the back of the nose. By applying a local anesthetic to the area, nerve impulses can be temporarily blocked, providing relief from various types of pain. The patented SphenoCath® is designed to quickly and comfortably deliver medication to the area of the sphenopalatine ganglion. Read more…

Call AI3 at 727-791-7300 to get fast relief from severe migraines and headaches!

 

Peripheral Artery Disease PAD

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

 

Hardening of the Arteries Is a Red Flag for Vascular Disease, Including Heart Attack and Stroke

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD), also known as Peripheral Vascular Disease (PVD), is a very common condition affecting 20 percent of Americans age 65 and older. Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) develops most commonly as a result of atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, which occurs when cholesterol and scar tissue build up, forming a substance called plaque inside the arteries. This is a very serious condition. The clogged arteries cause decreased blood flow to the legs, which can result in pain when walking, and eventually gangrene and amputation.

Because atherosclerosis is a systemic disease (that is, affects the body as a whole), individuals with Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) are likely to have blocked arteries in other areas of the body. Thus, those with PAD are at increased risk for heart disease, aortic aneurysms and stroke. Peripheral Artery Disease is also a marker for diabetes, hypertension and other conditions. Peripheral Artery Disease may also be caused by blood clots.

Symptoms

The most common symptom of Peripheral Artery Disease PAD is called intermittent claudication, which is painful cramping in the leg or hip that occurs when walking or exercising and typically disappears when the person stops the activity.

  • Numbness, tingling and weakness in the lower legs and feet
  • Burning or aching pain in feet or toes when resting
  • Sore on leg or foot that won’t heal
  • Cold legs or feet
  • Color change in skin of legs or feet
  • Loss of hair on legs
  • Have pain in the legs or feet that awakens you at night
  • Many people simply live with their pain, assuming it is a normal part of aging, rather than reporting it to their doctor.

Prevalence

PAD is a disease of the arteries that affects 10 million Americans.

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) can happen to anyone, regardless of age, and is most commonly seen in men and women over age 50.

Risk Factors

Those who are at highest risk for PAD are

  • Over age 50
  • Smokers
  • Diabetic
  • Overweight
  • Inactive (and do not exercise)
  • Have high blood pressure or high cholesterol or high lipid blood test
  • Have a family history of vascular disease, such as PAD, aneurysm, heart attack or stroke

Diagnosis

The most common test for PAD is the ankle-brachial index (ABI), a painless exam in which ultrasound is used to measure the ratio of blood pressure in the feet and arms. Based on the results of an ABI as well as one’s symptoms and risk factors for PAD, a doctor can decide if further tests are needed. PAD also can be diagnosed noninvasively with an imaging technique called magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) or with computed tomography (CT) angiography.

Ankle-Brachial Index 

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) is a major public health issue, and the Society of Interventional Radiology recommends greater screening efforts through the use of the ankle-brachial index (ABI) test.

The ABI is a simple, painless test that compares the blood pressure reading in the arm and ankle. It is a direct measure of fatty plaque buildup in leg arteries and an indirect gauge of plaque accumulations throughout the entire cardiovascular system.

The blood pressure in your arms and ankles is checked using a regular blood pressure cuff and a special ultrasound stethoscope called a Doppler. The pressure in your foot is compared to the pressure in your arm to determine how well your blood is flowing and whether further tests are needed.

Because atherosclerosis is a systemic disease, individuals developing plaque in their legs are likely to have plaque building up in the carotid arteries, which can lead to stroke, or the coronary arteries, which can lead to heart attack. Early detection of PAD is important because these individuals are at significantly increased risk, and preventive measures can be taken.

An individual with an ABI of 0.3 (high risk) has a two- to three-fold increased risk of five-year cardiovascular death compared to a patient with an ABI of 0.95 (normal or low risk).

Treatments

Lifestyle Changes

Often Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) can be treated with lifestyle changes. Smoking cessation and a structured exercise program are often all that is needed to alleviate symptoms and prevent further progression of the disease.

Medication

Medications that lower cholesterol or control high blood pressure may be prescribed. Medication also is available that been shown to significantly increase pain-free walking distance and total walking distance in individuals with intermittent claudication. Other medications that prevent blood clots or the buildup of plaque in the arteries are available as well.

Interventional Radiology

Angioplasty and Stenting 

Angioplasty and Stent

Angioplasty and Stent

Interventional radiologists pioneered angioplasty and stenting, which was first performed to treat peripheral arterial disease. Using imaging for guidance, the interventional

radiologist threads a catheter through the femoral artery in the groin, to the blocked artery in the legs. Then the interventional radiologist inflates a balloon to open the blood vessel where it is narrowed or blocked. In some cases this is then held open with a stent, a tiny metal cylinder. This is a minimally invasive treatment that does not require surgery, just a nick in the skin the size of a pencil tip.

Balloon angioplasty and stenting have generally replaced invasive surgery as the first-line treatment for PAD. Early randomized trials have shown interventional therapy to be as effective as surgery for many arterial occlusions, and in the past years, a very large clinical experience in centers throughout the world has shown that stenting and angioplasty are preferred as a first-line treatment for more and more processes throughout the body.

Atherectomy

With this treatment, a tiny catheter is inserted into the artery at the site of blockage that is able to “shave” or “cut” the plaque from the inside of the artery and remove it from the patient. View this brief animated demonstration from one of our device companies.

Atherectomy

Click here to watch a brief animation video

 

Back surgery: When is it a good idea?

Back pain is extremely common, and surgery often fails to relieve it. Find out why your back hurts and whether surgery might help. By Mayo Clinic Staff

 

Trauma, aging, improper body mechanics, and normal wear and tear can all injure your spine. Damage to any part of your back or pressure on the nerves in your spine can cause back pain and other symptoms. If you have ongoing back pain, maybe you’ve wondered — could back surgery help?

In fact, back surgery is needed in only a small percentage of cases. Most back problems can be taken care of with nonsurgical treatments, such as anti-inflammatory medication, ice, heat, gentle massage and physical therapy. When conservative treatments don’t help, back surgery may offer relief. But it doesn’t help every type of back pain.

 

Do you need back surgery?

 

Back surgery might be needed:

  • If you have a condition that compresses your spinal nerves, causing debilitating back pain or numbness along the back of your leg.
  • In some instances when you have bulging or ruptured (herniated) disks — the rubbery cushions separating the bones in your spine. However, many people with bulging disks have no pain.
  • If you have broken bones (fractured vertebrae) or other damage to your spinal column from an injury that leaves your spine unstable.
  • If you have vertebral fractures and an unstable spine related to osteoporosis.
  • If you’ve first tried conservative measures and they fail to relieve your back pain or other symptoms.

The following conditions may require surgery if they’re progressive, painful or causing nerve compression:

  • Scoliosis, a curvature of the spine
  • Kyphosis, a humpback deformity
  • Spondylolisthesis, the forward slippage of a segment of the spine
  • Spinal stenosis, narrowing of the spinal canal typically from arthritis
  • Radiculopathy, the irritation and inflammation of a nerve caused by a herniated disk
  • Degenerative disk disease, the development of pain in a disk as a result of its normal wear and tear

10 Advantages to UFE

Your doctor just told you to have a hysterectomy for your fibroids.

Before you do anything, make sure you look into this non-surgical alternative (UFE)

10 Advantages to UFE

  1. It’s safe. 
    At least a million women, worldwide, have been successfully treated
  2. It’s simple. 
    Most procedures take about half an hour
  3. It’s cost effective.
    No lengthy hospital stays or the fees that come with them
  4. Symptom relief is immediate.
    Pain, heavy bleeding, anemia, fatigue will end with embolization
  5. No hospital stay.
    This is an out-patient treatment
  6. No cutting.
    With embolization there are no scalpels, sutures or scarring
  7. No ‘going under’.
    You won’t be exposed to the risks of general anesthetic
  8. Less downtime.
    Most patients return to work in a matter of days
  9. No recurrence. 
    Fibroids don’t return, as they often do with surgeries like myomectomy
  10. Keep your fertility.
    There’s no trauma to, or removal of, the uterus

Women’s Health Alert: Hysterectomy and Myomectomy Surgery

Another Reason Uterine Fibroid Embolization is the Best Option

Women’s Health Alert: Deadly Cancers of the Uterus Spread by Gynecologists. Stop Morcellating the Uterus in Minimally Invasive and Robot Assisted Hysterectomy and Myomectomy Surgery

Laparoscopic power morcellators are medical devices used during different types of laparoscopic (minimally invasive) surgeries. These can include certain procedures to treat uterine fibroids, such as removing the uterus (hysterectomy) or removing the uterine fibroids (myomectomy). Morcellation refers to the division of tissue into smaller pieces or fragments and is often used during laparoscopic surgeries to facilitate the removal of tissue through small incision sites.        Read more…

Tampa Bay Times also reports:

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration took the rare step Thursday of urging doctors to stop performing a surgical procedure used on tens of thousands of woman each year to remove uterine growths, saying the practice risks spreading hidden cancers within a woman’s body.      Read more…