Has anybody had Veinwave treatment for spider veins? I am interested in its effectiveness and safety?
This particular guinea pig got her first broken veins on her cheeks at the age of 10, when the vile nuns at her boarding school hurled everybody out of doors to play lacrosse on the clifftops in the January gales. Over the years they’ve got worse, and more have come along from random activities like zapping blackheads too violently. Ever done that and watched, horrified, as a red vein zigzags down the side of your nose? Awful.There are, says the lovely Marie Duckett, many factors that contribute to broken veins: baths and steam rooms that are too hot; hot food; extreme weather; knee-high tights; trauma; pregnancy; crossing your legs for prolonged periods and the seat edge of a chair can bring them out at the back of your knees. And, of course, sun damage.The most common ones Marie deals with are on the face and chest, and the system she operates is Veinwave, which entails injecting a current of heat that coagulates the vein and causes it to collapse; it is then absorbed by the body.I h