Upload

Loading...

Ronald Dalman, MD, discusses Venous Disease and treatment at Stanford Hospital

784 views

Loading...

Loading...

Loading...

Rating is available when the video has been rented.
This feature is not available right now. Please try again later.
Published on Apr 5, 2012

Veins carry blood back to the heart to be oxygenated, carrying that blood through valves. When those valves don't function properly, venous disease can develop. Ronald Dalman, MD, explains signs, risk factors and treatments for venous disease available at Stanford Hospital.

One type of venous disease is varicose veins, which affect women disproportionately. According to Dalman, an estimated 40 percent of women will have chronically significant varicose veins by the time they reach 50.

Another type is Deep Vein Thrombosis, or DVT, where blood begins to pool and clot in the lower extremities. Often treated with blood thinners, DVT can be serious as there is a greater risk that a clot can break off and travel to other areas of the body, including the lungs where it may cause problems breathing or heart function.

Learn more:
http://stanfordhealthcare.org/stanfor...
http://stanfordhealthcare.org/medical...

Visit: http://stanfordhealthcare.org/

  • Category

  • License

    • Standard YouTube License

Loading...

When autoplay is enabled, a suggested video will automatically play next.

Up next


to add this to Watch Later

Add to

Loading playlists...