Improve Varicose Veins and Spider Veins with Acupuncture!

By Dr. Janine Pulley

Many people suffer from varicose veins and their milder form known as spider veins, which often form on the legs. These veins are visible due to their enlargement and pooling of blood, which can also become quite painful. Sometimes people also have painful swelling of their legs, dry skin or eczema, and heaviness of their legs.

Inside of your veins, there are one way valves that keep the blood flowing in one direction. When you walk, your leg muscles squeeze the veins, which pushes the blood up from your feet back to your heart. Once the blood reaches your heart, it is pumped to your lungs for oxygenation, then back to the heart to be pumped out to the rest of your body once more.

Varicose veins and spider veins are due to damage in the leg blood vessels – these one way valves break, so the blood falls downward with gravity and pools up. This damage can occur for a variety of reasons. One major reason is a sedentary lifestyle – you need to walk to squeeze the blood up, which is yet another reason why you should take regular walking breaks at work and go for a daily walk. Another common reason is weight. When you are overweight, the extra weight puts more pressure on your entire body, which makes it harder for your legs to squeeze the blood back to your heart and for your heart to pump as well.

One of the most common treatments for varicose veins is surgery where the veins are removed from the legs. However, this removal can cause issues because every surgery has associated risks. Also, once you remove the veins, you can develop problems like swelling because you no longer have the channels to get the blood back to your heart. It’s like shutting down the whole highway just because there is a traffic jam but not opening up another highway – the back roads get clogged up instead.

Acupuncture, acupressure, massage, exercise, and herbal remedies can help alleviate varicose veins and spider veins as an alternate to surgery. All of these therapies help to improve circulation, which gets the pooled blood moving again to reduce their size and associated symptoms.1,2

Along with traditional acupuncture needling, a technique called “bleeding” can also help with spider veins and varicose veins. From a Chinese medicine point of view, the pooling blood is seen as blood stagnation – an actual accumulation of old, stagnant blood that is blocking the flow of the rest of your blood. A lancet is used to gently prick the vein and the dark, stagnant blood is let out to allow the blood to flow normally again. When the dark, stagnant blood is removed, pressure is applied to close the hole. Immediately the veins will be less visible with reduced bulging, and the pain will improve.


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After

Depending on the severity and chronicity of your varicose and spider veins, it may take several treatments before you experience significant relief. Not every vein can be bled, but your acupuncturist will need to see the veins in order to determine what course of treatment would be best for you.

Some spider veins are just too small to needle, while some varicose veins are too big to puncture. The veins that can be safely and effectively bled are the very dark small-to-medium ones with pooling, stagnant blood. Typically, they are so ready to release this excess blood and pressure that it does not even hurt to prick them!

A little nervous about the needles? Supplements can be extremely helpful too. The ideal is combining acupuncture, supplements, and increased exercise for maximum results.

Disclaimer: As always, consult your healthcare practitioner to see which supplements and their dosages would be best for you and your condition. All supplements are contraindicated during pregnancy and lactation unless otherwise directed by a qualified healthcare professional you are under current care with.

Collinsonia Root, also known as Stone Root, is traditionally used as a “vascular astringent” to help improve vascular tone. When those valves break, and blood begins to pool in the veins, the veins become distended or enlarged – hence varicose veins (also the same mechanism for hemorrhoids). Collinsonia Root helps prevent and heal varicose veins, spider veins, and hemorrhoids by returning the vascular tone that has been lost. The average person should take 3 capsules of Collinsonia Root with a full glass of warm water in between meals.

Vascular Care Complex is a combination of great herbs that improve peripheral circulation and aid circulation in veins: Butcher’s Broom root & rhizome, Horsechestnut seed, and Ginkgo leaf. In addition to helping with varicose and spider veins, it can help anyone who experiences restless leg syndrome due to poor circulation, edema, aching legs and feet, and cold hands and feet. The typical dose is 1 tablet 3x/day for the average person.

Cyruta® Plus is a supplement made from the leaves of the buckwheat plant. The buckwheat leaves are very high in naturally occurring vitamin P factors, which are important for vascular integrity. When people are deficient in vitamin P factors, they suffer from “pink toothbrush” or bleeding gums because the capillaries are fragile and easily damaged. So Cyruta® Plus can also be helpful for those with varicose veins and spider veins because it helps repair, improve tone, and reduce inflammation in the vascular system. It can sometimes help reduce high levels of C-Reactive Protein (CRP), which is a sign of vascular inflammation and a major indicator of heart disease. For the average person, they should take 3 capsules of Cyruta® Plus with a full glass of warm water in between meals.

Gotu Kola Complex contains Gotu Kola leaf, Grape seed, and Ginkgo leaf for healthy skin, capillary and circulation support. This herbal combination is one of the best for improving microcirculation. I often recommend it to patients recovering from surgery. I also recommend it to anyone who wants healthier skin or to reduce fine lines and wrinkles. The average person, they should take 1 tablet 3x/day.

Call 978-237-5106 to have your varicose and spider veins evaluated today by Dr. Pulley!

Updated May 25, 2023; Original post May 11, 2017