Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

A hospital in Bangkok quoted me 220,000 baht to treat varicose veins in both legs, using the laser ablation method. Breakdown was 10k per leg for ultrasound, and 100k per leg for the laser ablation. No overnight hospital stay required. Does this sound reasonable, anyone have recent experience with this procedure ? 

Posted
1 minute ago, Harrisfan said:

Sounds like a waste of money. 3 years rent.

Invaluable advice Dr. Bignok.

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted

Have you considered sclerotherapy? An injection is made into the blood vessels to block them off, and the varicose vein subsequently disappears.  It's minimally invasive and an outpatient treatment.   Should cost a lot less.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted

I did at Bumrungrad many years ago using some new tech with only a few minor incisions, they are all go now.

It was not expensive for 1 leg, maybe because I could leave the hospital in the afternoon and no need to admin... So, got there 9am fasting, back home by 4pm with lots of pain walking, but cleared after few days.


The doctor was a friend, so he didnt charge too much for his fees, but I had to pay full for the hospital fee which was around 44K THB, without the discount about 120K. maybe today should be close to 200K.

 

I only did because I had the opportunity and  it was genetic to my DNA. it's been 10 years since then and my legs looks exactly the same today without any large varicose vein ( that's because I became athlete in the past 10 years since the surgery)

 

 

Sclerotherapy is also a good option, if you only have very small varicose vein or spider veins. Large ones need the actual removal of the vein.

  • Thanks 2
Posted
1 hour ago, Zaphod Priest said:

Have you considered sclerotherapy? An injection is made into the blood vessels to block them off, and the varicose vein subsequently disappears.  It's minimally invasive and an outpatient treatment.   Should cost a lot less.

Have you had this? If so, how long ago? My surgeon back in 1990 told me he didn't do injections because they don't work. He performed 'strip and ligate' upon my legs in sections, as he said it was less 'barbaric'.

Posted
15 hours ago, sexyman said:

A hospital in Bangkok quoted me 220,000 baht to treat varicose veins in both legs, using the laser ablation method. Breakdown was 10k per leg for ultrasound, and 100k per leg for the laser ablation. No overnight hospital stay required. Does this sound reasonable, anyone have recent experience with this procedure ? 

10k per leg is steep. SHould only be 1-2k... so if they are overcharging this then the laser is probably triple the normal cost. 

  • Love It 1
Posted

Just my opinion since my wife and I treat and prevent ailments with natural foods. I realise that you might reject the premise that foods prevent and cure medical problems, but Google search "how to treat varicose vein problems with food". It's a shame to spend so much money when the cause of the problem might be what you eat and your lifestyle.

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted

What are varicose veins?

 

For those who imagine the only concern is aesthetic:

 

They are veins that are not transporting adequate quantities of blood back to the heart.  Because the valves in the two deep veins in each leg are not closing correctly.  This in turn can be because the bore of these veins has become enlarged beyond the norm of about 5 mm.

 

This can result in arterial hypotension (low blood pressure).  If the heart receives inadequate blood, the consequences can be serious.

 

[According to a medical researcher, Dr Micozzi, writing several years ago, more U.S. citizens die from hypotension than hypertension.  The reason he gives is that patients on drugs for hypertension return to their doctor for a renewed prescription and some doctors issue the prescription without checking whether the patient's blood pressure has fallen to normal.]

 

The venous system is designed to leak a certain proportion of its blood plasma to the lymphatic system, which bathes the body's cells, bringing them needed nutrients and carrying away their metabolic waste products.  The lymph is leaked out through capillaries of a bore too small to accept cellular matter, such as red and white blood cells.

 

When blood tends to stagnate in the veins it can exert excess pressure in the lower legs and feet, causing excess leakage of blood plasma and lymphoedema.  Lymphoedema manifests itself as swollen feet and ankles, and if it persists for too long it can give rise to cripplingly painful venous ulcers, which are very difficult to heal and can persist for years.  Despite their name, these ulcers weep principally lymph, sometimes mixed with blood.

Treating the deep veins, using silicone stents, may be the more effective way to deal with varicose ulcers, if things have deteriorated to this stage.

 

Killing off the superficial veins by sclerotherapy is cheaper than surgical stripping, but requires more visits over a longer period; since it deliberately causes blood clotting, and must therefore by done little by little.  Not all the clotted blood can be removed, but as much as possible is sucked out later with a hypodermic syringe.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...