Just saw a piece on local news about the FDA’s recent approval of Asclera for the treatment of small spider veins, and was wondering if the results last longer than traditional saline sclerotherapy.
Over the years, I’ve had multiple sessions (as directed) of the traditional saline sclerosing injections. Although the veins may disappear after the appropriate healing time, within 6 months to 1 year, they are back in abundance in the same areas of my legs (back of knees, etc.).
Based on my experience, I’d have to say that the saline solution can temporarily eliminate the vein; however, it’s doing nothing to eradicate the underlying problem that causes the vein to re-appear, so the treatment is worthless.
Will treatment with Asclera give more permanent results, or should I not waste my money?
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Tagged with: abundance • fda • healing time • knees • legs • local news • money • saline solution • sclerotherapy • sessions • spider veins
Filed under: Spider Vein Treatment
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I’ve been using aethoxysclerol on my patients for over 15 years, and have found it to be very successful in treating the spider veins, without the pain sometimes associated with saline, or the risk of scarring. So far, I have not used the Asclera, but will in the near future. I’m not sure the results will be the same as the concentration of the aethoxysclerol that I was using was a bit higher than the Asclera. Time will tell, i guess.