Modern vein medicine no longer involves vein-stripping or hospital stays. The treatments below are performed in our office in fifteen minutes or less, with most patients walking out and returning to normal activity the same day.
Each of these therapies has a specific clinical use case. Some target larger feeder veins; others address the surface vessels you see in the mirror. Most treatment plans combine more than one — chosen during your consultation based on your ultrasound findings, anatomy, and goals.
A thin catheter delivers controlled radiofrequency energy to the inside of an underperforming vein, sealing it shut. Blood naturally reroutes through healthy vessels. RFA is the gold-standard treatment for the great and small saphenous veins — the truncal vessels that, when failed, drive most varicose vein disease.
An FDA-approved microfoam that fills and closes diseased veins — including tortuous, branching, or recurrent veins that aren't candidates for catheter-based therapies. Particularly useful for complex anatomy and previously-treated legs that need touch-up.
A medical-grade adhesive seals the diseased vein with a single small needle entry. VenaSeal is uniquely well-suited to patients who can't tolerate compression stockings, who want to avoid tumescent anesthesia, or whose anatomy favors an adhesive rather than thermal approach.
A fine needle delivers a sclerosing agent into surface veins, causing them to fade over the weeks that follow. The cosmetic gold standard for spider and reticular veins. Multiple sessions are typical for full clearance — and results are highly dependent on technique.
A clinical exam and venous reflux ultrasound to map the underlying disease. You leave the visit knowing your diagnosis and treatment options.
Procedures are performed in-office, take 15 minutes or less, and use local anesthesia where needed. You walk out and return to normal activity the same day.
A short post-treatment ultrasound confirms closure and rules out complications. Annual surveillance helps catch new disease early.
Most insurance plans cover medically necessary vein treatment. We'll review benefits with you before any procedure.