I am having ultrasound done next week on both legs. How long can a person live with Venous stasis?

I had a stress fracture in my leg near the ankle. It healed fine, that was never a problem, but I didn’t realize how important it was after being immobile to exercise. There was no physical therapy because insurance companies apparently don’t want to pay for that. So now I might have some damage to my leg veins. I only have one nodule under the skin in a superficial one. It looks like I will know more next week. I am now doing 7 to 14 miles at the gym every day.

Answers from doctors (3)


More About Doctor Vein Specialists

Published on Jun 04, 2018

If the only sign of venous disease you have noticed since your fracture is a small soft compressible lump (varicose vein?) and you are able to put in 7-14 miles each day at the gym, it sounds like you are doing pretty well and the likelihood of this varicose vein being a long term problem is small. I doubt you caused any direct trauma to your leg as a result of your fracture or the immobility thereafter. Compression hose therapy might be beneficial.

Answered by Vein Specialists (View Profile)

If the only sign of venous disease you have noticed since your fracture is a small soft compressible lump (varicose vein?) and you are able to put in 7-14 miles each day at the gym, it sounds like you are doing pretty well and the likelihood of this varicose vein being a long term problem is small. I doubt you caused any direct trauma to your leg as a result of your fracture or the immobility thereafter. Compression hose therapy might be beneficial.

Published on Jul 11, 2012


More About Doctor Allure Medical

Published on May 29, 2018

Venous stasis is quite common, and if it is minor with minimal symptoms, you can just wear support stockings as needed. When you start seeing discoloration of your ankles (brown patches, red spots, purple veins at inside of ankle), it should be treated, as this progresses at 4% per year and can lead to your skin ulcerating (a wound developing that is hard to heal).

Answered by Allure Medical (View Profile)

Venous stasis is quite common, and if it is minor with minimal symptoms, you can just wear support stockings as needed. When you start seeing discoloration of your ankles (brown patches, red spots, purple veins at inside of ankle), it should be treated, as this progresses at 4% per year and can lead to your skin ulcerating (a wound developing that is hard to heal).

Published on Jul 11, 2012


Hratch Karamanoukian, MD, FACS, RVT, RPVI , RPhS

Published on May 24, 2018

You can live forever with venous stasis. Venous stasis does not kill patients.

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Answered by Hratch Karamanoukian, MD, FACS, RVT, RPVI , RPhS

You can live forever with venous stasis. Venous stasis does not kill patients.

Published on Jul 11, 2012


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