Posts Tagged sclerotherapy

StriMedix-K Product Review

Posted on July 12, 2009 with 6 Comments

The wonderful thing about Strimedix®-K is the fact that it’s a remarkably multipurpose cream used for various conditions ranging from rosacea to vein dysfunction. It can even help heal your bruises faster. This product’s medicinal properties are the very factors that make it stand out from all its cosmetic cream competitors.

On that note, it’s understandable for customers to be unconvinced about this ointment’s seemingly bogus features

Strimedix-K Spider Veins Cream

Strimedix-K Spider Veins Cream

reminiscent of the ever-pejorative snake oil panacea, especially in regards to its supposed cure-all versatility.

To clarify, this product has a lot of side uses, but like the much maligned snake oil (which was originally used to relieve joint pain), it has one very specific purpose: to allegedly clear away and get rid of spider veins. The other uses of adult rosacea treatment, vein wall repair, skin healing, and bruise curing are just fortunate but incidental bonuses to it’s therapeutic function.

(This product can be purchased at www.spider-veins.us by clicking on the following link: Strimedix-K)

Strimedix®-K’s natural ingredients like .05% emu oil, hyaluronic acid, aloe butter, jojoba oil, 5% phytotonine, 2% Vitamin K, and many other components promote a harmonious effect that motivates healthy clarification and granulation of damaged skin as well as epithelial growth.

It also offers a viable substitute to saline injections, Sclerotherapy, or laser cosmetic therapy (Laser and Intense Pulsed Light or IPL). You’ll never have to fear varicose veins, thread veins, spider veins, and various other similar venous disorders ever again with the impressive effectiveness of this product.

Venous conditions are typically caused by external pressure that causes venous protrusions, malfunction of “feeder” or arterial valves, weak vein wall or capillary structure, Vitamin K-1 or K-2 deficiency, and general venous damage. Moreover, spider veins (also known as sunburst varicosities or Telangiectasias) can appear at inopportune times such as after strenuous exercise, standing over long periods of time, or pregnancy.

In any case, this spider veins treatment works through its potent, industrial-strength Vitamin K and Phytotonine formulation that’s mixed together in an emu oil base (which can be substituted with a non-greasy, glycerin base). What’s more, the cream actually has to ability to penetrate so deep into your skin that it can repair internal vein damages to avoid clogging and increase blood pressure, coagulate trickling blood flow, and improve valve performance.

All the same, regardless of the cause or even the severity of your disorder (up to a certain point, anyway), Strimedix®-K has it all covered. Its 100% money back guarantee is also a nice touch. When it comes to treating spider veins, varicose veins, and other venous skin conditions, it gets a solid 9.11 out of 10 stars.

Can You Cure Spider Veins?

Posted on June 21, 2009 with No Comments

If we are to pick an answer, between yes and no, for this curative question, we will be forced to say ‘No’ - though this answer needs some explanation.

 

Spider veins are not completely curable, or, better said, the source or cause is not easily cured. Most dermatologist and physicians agree undue pressure on the walls and valves due to weight, damage from sun or free-radical exposure, and hormone changes are primary causes.

 

While your diet and an active lifestyle have been shown to lower the chances of vein problems, creams and treatments can heal and cure localized symptoms - either through laser treatment, spot saline injections or with vitamin k creams and formulas.  Once individual capillaries are flushed of coagulated blood, repaired or cut-off from trapped blood flow, in a sense it has been “cured” - at least the visible symptoms.

 

The appearance of protruding or visible spider veins are a condition that appears just below the surface of the skin,  and as the name suggests, this medical condition is generally a result of damage to the veins caused by pressure, poor valve health or malfunctioning valves in capillary “feeder” capillaries.

 

More often than not it is treated like a cosmetic concern, and as we well all know, cosmetic problems have a bigger tendency of recurring.

 

Claiming Complete Cure

 

There is a huge difference between claiming a complete cure and actually eliminating an ailment. Many of the treatment option with regards to spider veins claim that they can cure spider veins completely. This might just be a true claim, but the point is that, they don’t promise that damage won’t recur in the same area which has been cured or in different parts of the body.

 

As of now experts cannot promise the sufferers anything more than the fact that they can diffuse the redness or bluish color that accompanies spider veins and many a times, get rid of damage altogether. As aforementioned, this does not mean that patients will be completely rid of them.

 

Magic Cures

 

Let us be very clear in this respect. There are no magic cures for spider veins. Spider Veins cream are getting to be quite popular these days. They have been found to be effective in getting rid of spider veins because of the curative properties of Vitamin K.

 

However, even such creams should not be thought of as a magic cure as their efficacy is entirely dependent on the seriousness of the condition.

 

More importantly, such creams have to be used over a long period of time and that too regularly, for any hope of getting rid of broken capillaries or seeping blood.

 

Prevention is the Best Idea & Remedy

 

For whatever its worth, to prevent spider veins is a better idea then curing them. In the end if they do show up, one of the most effective ways of treating them is through minor surgical procedures.

One of the best ways to prevent the formation of spider veins is through regular exercise and putting prime importance on your diet. At the end of the day, the prevention bit is pretty simple, though difficult to follow. It’s your body’s overall health that counts. Everything else is secondary.