Varicose veins are swollen, twisted veins that can be seen just
under the surface of the skin, usually in the legs. More than 30
million people in the U.S. have varicose veins. Although the
condition is often dismissed as nothing more than a cosmetic
nuisance, it can cause moderate pain and has been linked to the more
serious side effect of deep vein thrombosis, or blood clots in the
deep veins in the body.
For the current study, researchers analyzed data on almost 500,000
people participating in the long-term UK Biobank study, looking for
traits associated with risk for varicose veins, and height stood out
as a strong, independent risk factor.
They followed this with a genome-wide scan of several hundred
thousand people that identified 30 genetic locations, many of them
involved in skeletal and blood vessel development, which further
suggest tallness may be a direct cause of varicose veins.
"We do not yet know why height is such a strong risk factor for
varicose veins," said senior study author Dr. Nicholas Leeper of
Stanford University in California.

"It may be a simple matter of plumbing and gravity, with taller
individuals experiencing higher pressures in their veins, causing
them to enlarge and dilate," Leeper said by email. "On the other
hand, the powerful genetics studies we conducted showed that height
is not only associated with disease, but also seems to be causal for
disease - an important distinction, because the genes that regulate
human height could have a role in the structure and integrity of the
veins."
The analysis used machine learning to search Biobank participants'
data for patterns linking varicose veins with other traits and
confirmed that well-known risk factors - including being older,
female, overweight or pregnant, or having a history of deep vein
thrombosis - are all associated with varicose veins.
Surgery on the legs, family history, lack of movement, smoking and
hormone therapy are also risk factors for varicose veins, the study
confirmed.
But the connection between height and varicose veins was new and
unexpected.
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Comparing the tallest 25 percent of people to the shortest, the
analysis showed the tallest had 74 percent higher risk of varicose
veins, according to the results in Circulation.
In addition, researchers screened for genetic markers associated
with varicose veins in 337,536 people, 9,577 of whom had varicose
vein disease. The resulting 30 locations on the genome provide new
leads for researchers to investigate the mechanisms involved in
varicose vein development and risk, the authors note.
One limitation of the study is that the participants in the UK
Biobank might not reflect what would happen in populations in other
parts of the world.
Still, it offers some of the most comprehensive insight to date into
the environmental and biological factors that might influence the
risk of varicose veins, said Dr. Quinn Wells, of Vanderbilt
University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee.
"Although findings of this study may not immediately impact patient
care, understanding these factors is the first step toward
developing effective interventions for prevention and treatment of
varicose veins," Wells, who wrote an accompanying editorial, said by
email.
Generally, people can help prevent varicose veins by maintaining a
healthy body weight and exercising to improve muscle strength and
circulation, Wells advised.
"People should also avoid periods of uninterrupted standing or
sitting, and if prolonged standing is unavoidable (e.g., for a job),
they could consider wearing compression stockings to help keep blood
from pooling in the legs," Wells said. "Once varicose veins develop,
the measures above can help prevent them from getting worse and help
with discomfort."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2P7k4mm and https://bit.ly/2JDjwio
Circulation, online September 24, 2018.
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