ARTICOLI CORRELATI

Anemia in children

Anemia is the clinical condition in which the hemoglobin rate is less than the third percentile relative to the patient’s age group. Symptoms appear in relation to the rapidity of

Blocked carotid arteries: when to intervene?

Obstruction of the carotid arteries (they carry blood and oxygen to the brain) can be treated with medication or by resorting to surgery. Tips for “cleaning” the vessels and preventing

THE FUNCTIONS.

Cardiac Arrest causes immediate widespread ischemia in the body with cellular reactions within the various organs impairing their function and sometimes even thwarting resuscitation maneuvers for circulatory restoration. Consequences of

Mitral valve repair: new surgical instruments

A new surgical tool for mitral valve repair: simplifies valve repair, avoiding recourse to open-heart surgery Researchers studying this new device to repair the mitral valve report results on the

Family dysautonomy

Involuntary nervous system dysfunction, or familial dysautonomia, is a genetic disorder that goes to groups of nerve cells, which are not properly developed and do not survive.

The mechanism of hunger and insulin

When insulin is not absorbed, it means there is resistance to its action, and then glucose levels remain high. This results in the body needing greater amounts of insulin to reduce glycemic levels.

THE CAUSES.

Sudden cardiac arrest comes mainly from cardiac pathology, such as from existing cardiovascular disease or coronary syndromes, representing the first and most obvious consequence of heart disease. There may be

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

An abdominal aortic aneurysm is a permanent pathological dilatation, a kind of balloon-like bulge, affecting the wall of the largest artery in the abdomen. Although the exact causes are currently

Venous insufficiency

insufficienza-venosa-1

Venous insufficiency and associated vascular disorders, such as varicose veins and telangiectasias (superficial capillaries), mainly affect the venous vessels of the legs and arms and are mainly related to the decrease in vein wall tone associated with aging and promoted, in larger veins, by the partial failure of the semilunar valves.

Venous insufficiency can also affect young people, especially if they are women and if there is a family history of the disorder, but it becomes very common in both sexes from the age of 40. Based on available data, it is estimated that at least 40 percent of women and 25 percent of men over the age of 20 suffer from it.

The development of venous insufficiency is in part physiological and related to the loss of tone and elasticity of the walls of the veins and the “wearing out” of the semilunar valves (semilunar-shaped structures placed along the walls of the veins that have the function of promoting the upward flow of blood and its return from the periphery to the heart) present within them, which are naturally associated with aging.

However, the intensity and rapidity with which venous insufficiency problems set in are very different from person to person, depending on the presence and relevance of numerous endogenous and exogenous variables that significantly influence the likelihood of developing venous disorders of various types.

The main risk factors for venous insufficiency include:

  • familiarity: in 75% of cases, a person complaining of venous insufficiency belongs to a family in which there is at least one other person with varicose veins; this suggests that the cause of the disorder is at least partly genetic, but the identity of the specific genes involved is unknown;
  • pregnancy: this is the main predisposing condition because of the weight gain and hormonal changes involved, both of which are detrimental to the health of leg veins;
  • hormonal changes associated with menopause and the use of oral contraceptives: these contribute to aggravating the symptoms of venous insufficiency and promote the occurrence of varicose veins;
  • smoking: it is harmful to the entire cardiovascular system; at the arterial level, it reduces the proportion of good cholesterol (HDL) and increases the formation of oxidizing agents and free radicals, promoting the atherosclerotic process; at the venous level, it can aggravate venous insufficiency by reducing the availability of vitamins and antioxidants;
  • sedentariness and overweight/obesity: taken individually, and all the more so in combination, they significantly promote the development and worsening of venous insufficiency; the former because they prevent adequate muscular support for the walls of the veins, the latter because they exacerbate the work required of the veins to move blood back to the heart and lead to a general increase in systemic inflammation, which is harmful to the cardiovascular system.

SPECIALISTI IN EVIDENZA

  • Profile picture of Dott. Cristiano Crisafulli
    active 3 years, 10 months ago

    Diabetologist, Basic Doctors, Internist

    • Via Vittorio Emanuele II 181 - Acireale
    phone
  • Profile picture of Dr. Squillante Gianni Erminio
    active 3 years, 10 months ago

    Acupuncturists, Homeopathic Medicine, Basic Doctors

    • Via Monterotondo 14 - Roma
    phone
  • Profile picture of Dott. Gianlorenzo Casani
    active 3 years, 10 months ago

    Geriatrics, Certifying Doctor, Basic Doctors

    • Via Costantino Baroni 71/73 - Milano
    phone
  • Profile picture of Dott.ssa Cinzia Maria Zurra
    active 3 years, 10 months ago

    Basic Doctors, Aesthetic Doctors, Nutritionists

    • Viale Rimembranze 5 - Triuggio
    phone
  • Profile picture of Dr. Lorenzo Cerreoni
    active 3 years, 10 months ago

    Aesthetic Doctors, Basic Doctors

    • Via Macero Sauli 52 - Forlì
    phone

PATOLOGIE CORRELATE

Cellulite

Cellulite is an inflammatory-based alteration of the fat-rich subcutaneous tissue(panniculus adiposus), triggered by fluid stagnation due to poor venous and lymphatic circulation (lymph is a fluid that flows in channels

Aortic valvulopathy

When the aortic valve does not properly perform its function of pumping blood into the heart, an aortic disease condition occurs that also involves the left ventricle. Aortic valve disease

Angina pectoris

Referred to by the Latin name for its main manifestation, a weight-like or vice-like tightness in the chest, angina pectoris is not a disease per se, but the consequence of

Myocardial infarction

Acute myocardial infarction, which affects about 100,000 people in Italy each year, corresponds to the death of a part of the heart muscle due to an interruption in the supply

Venous insufficiency

Venous insufficiency and associated vascular disorders, such as varicose veins and telangiectasias (superficial capillaries), mainly affect the venous vessels of the legs and arms and are mainly related to the

Obstructive sleep apnea

Repetitive episodes of upper airway obstruction may occur during sleep, often accompanied by reduced oxygen saturation. Such episodes are accompanied in almost all cases by snoring. Apneas often end with

Carotid stenosis

Carotid artery stenosis corresponds to a narrowing of the caliber of the carotid arteries, which are the main blood vessels supplying the brain with oxygen- and nutrient-rich blood (particularly glucose),

Aortic aneurysm

An aortic aneurysm refers to permanent dilatation of a well-defined segment of the aorta, the largest artery in the body that receives blood directly from the left ventricle and distributes

Coronaropathy

The term coronary artery disease refers to chronic “distress” of the coronary arteries, the arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle, in most cases brought about by atherosclerotic pathology

Atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis is a pathological process that leads to the progressive formation of localized deposits composed mainly of fat and cholesterol and platelets (atheromas or atherosclerotic plaques) within the walls of
CULTURA E SALUTE
 
AGGIORNAMENTI
 
PERCORSI
 

your advertising
exclusively ON
MY SPECIAL DOCTOR

complete the form and you will be contacted by one of our managers