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A video visit with your doctor can be scheduled through MyChart. This offers the same high quality healthcare expertise from your doctor, with the added convenience of not having to travel to the doctor’s office.
Vein diseases can range from cosmetic problems to more serious conditions causing pain, swelling and other symptoms. But there’s no reason not to look or feel your best.
At Henry Ford Health, our vein team specializes in evaluating and treating a wide range of conditions, from varicose veins to deep vein thrombosis. We treat urgent issues and also help you protect your long-term health. No matter what you need, we can provide it.
The Henry Ford Vein Center is the only comprehensive program in southeast and south central Michigan dedicated to vein disease. We’re also one of the largest programs of our kind in the country, helping large numbers of people every year.
Led by vascular surgery and vascular medicine specialists, our team identifies the cause of your symptoms and delivers the latest treatments. We have extensive experience with the most complex and advanced forms of vein conditions.
Highlights of our program include:
A video visit with your doctor can be scheduled through MyChart. This offers the same high quality healthcare expertise from your doctor, with the added convenience of not having to travel to the doctor’s office.
Schedule an appointment with a vascular surgeon today.
You can visit our vein experts at locations across southeast and south central Michigan:
Veins return blood to your heart from throughout your body. Our vascular surgeons and vascular medicine specialists offer compassionate care for all types of conditions affecting these key blood vessels. Some common vein conditions we diagnose and treat include:
Venous compression syndromes develop when nearby structures squeeze major veins, potentially reducing blood flow or causing a blood clot. Our vein specialists have extensive experience in diagnosing and treating these complex disorders, which include:
When you come to Henry Ford with symptoms of a possible vein condition, our specialists conduct a comprehensive evaluation. Once we reach a diagnosis, we work with you to develop a personalized treatment plan.
Our team has the skills and resources to offer every treatment for vein disease. From medications and lifestyle changes to minimally invasive procedures and surgery, our vascular experts help find the right plan for you.
Making small changes and embracing healthy habits can improve your symptoms and slow the progress of vein disease. Our vascular specialists have years of experience helping people develop realistic goals to:
To improve the way you feel, you can also take steps on your own:
Our vascular medicine specialists treat many vein conditions by prescribing medications and monitoring your health at regular intervals. You may need one or more approaches:
Some vein conditions, such as varicose veins and chronic venous insufficiency, respond well to noninvasive therapies. These therapies include:
If you have a condition that’s causing more serious symptoms, our specialists offer the latest minimally invasive treatments. Many of these treatments take an endovascular approach, meaning doctors work inside the veins to fix the problem. They only need to make small incisions to do so.
Your care team has extensive expertise with these approaches, developed from helping thousands of people. We use safe, effective treatments, with faster healing, less pain during recovery and little or no downtime. Most people can go home the same day, or the next.
The minimally invasive treatments offered by our vascular surgeons and interventional radiologists include:
For clots, our vascular surgeon or interventional radiologist performs an endovascular procedure to access the affected vein. Your doctor inserts a catheter (thin, flexible tube) into the vein and guides it to the clot. Through the catheter, the doctor can remove the clot with tools.
This endovascular procedure treats veins that have more severe, ulcer-causing disease. The doctor uses a catheter with a camera and tiny instruments to surgically close the vein. Endovascular vein surgery is an outpatient procedure.
In an outpatient, endovascular procedure, your doctor uses a catheter with a tip that heats up with energy from a laser or radio waves. As the doctor slowly pulls the catheter out of the vein, the heat seals the vein shut.
In this endovascular procedure, our interventional radiology team places a filter in the inferior vena cava. The IVC is the main vein bringing blood back to the heart from the lower body. During the procedure, your doctor inserts the collapsed filter through the catheter and guides it into the IVC.
The filter then expands and attaches to the walls of the IVC, catching any blood clots that could travel to the heart or lungs. IVC filter placement is a treatment option for people at risk for blood clots who can’t take blood thinners.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends removing IVC filters when the risk of blood clots has passed. If you have an IVC filter, our specialists can remove it using an endovascular procedure.
We use advanced endovascular devices along with thrombolysis to dissolve and remove blood clots from veins. Your doctor guides the devices through the vein to the clot and administers clot-dissolving medications.
One device uses ultrasound, and the other a vibrating wire, to help break up the clot. The doctor uses the catheter to draw out the medications and remains of the clot.
Also known as ambulatory phlebectomy, this procedure removes smaller, diseased veins through several tiny incisions. You can return to your daily activities right after this outpatient procedure.
For severe cases of chronic venous insufficiency in deeper veins, your vascular surgeon may perform an endovascular procedure to open blockages. The surgeon inserts a catheter with a balloon tip, then inflates the balloon to widen the vein. In some cases, we may place a stent (tiny, metal-mesh tube) in the vein to hold it open.
In rare cases, you may need an open surgery called vein bypass. Your surgeon transplants a healthy vein from elsewhere in your body, attaching it above and below the diseased section of vein. Vein bypass surgery reroutes blood around the diseased part of the vein for improved blood flow.
Although vein treatment is highly effective, some conditions can recur (come back) or cause later complications. You’ll see our vascular medicine specialists, who provide ongoing care to manage your health and prevent problems. We check your blood flow on a set schedule, using ultrasound.
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