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So can we take that to mean "No, I haven't looked into or calculated the energy required, and I refuse to do so, because to me it's all obvious, and others should just accept it"?
... deflated the veins become used to being deflated and recover some resistance to pressure changes and become less incompetent as shown with Alun’s photographs.
Ben you can take it how you want. Varicose veins go flat using IBT no surgery required!
Quote from: Andrew K Fletcher on 20/01/2009 11:09:25... deflated the veins become used to being deflated and recover some resistance to pressure changes and become less incompetent as shown with Alun’s photographs.Here is an alternative hypothesis…Alun has vasculitis due a peculiarity of his immune system, and his vasculitis follows a relapsing-remitting course.Repeated episodes of this inflammation has damaged some of the valves in his veins, (e.g. stuck open), causing varicose veins. If at times his varicose veins do actually improve this could be explained by the vein valves returning to their correct position and becoming competent during remission when inflammation (valvulitis) subsides.
Quote from: Andrew K Fletcher on 20/01/2009 12:04:15Ben you can take it how you want. Varicose veins go flat using IBT no surgery required! Once again, I was not asking about IBT, I was not asking about varicose veins. Separate the results you see from your hypothesis for a while. The questions sophie has asked, and I wish to see answered, are not about the results, they are about the hypothesis you use to explain them. Do you not realise that, or are you intentionally avoiding it?
Wife and many others most definately do not have vasculitis any more than Alun does.
The photograph you have altered does not relate to Alun's true situation. I mentioned vasculitis to Alun as you suggested. He added "what a load of old....!"
Cutaneous vasculitisIn most cases general measures are all that is required to keep the patient comfortable until the rash spontaneously resolves. Rest and elevate affected limb, simple analgesics Protect fragile skin from injury If an underlying cause is found, removing the trigger usually clears the rash. Treat infection Discontinue responsible medication
Blueprints Cardiology: A Problem-Oriented Approach - Google Books Resultby Molly Ware, Cathy Jeon - 2005 - Medical - 276 pagesMore commonly, as the valvulitis heals, scarring, thickening, and adhesion of valve cusps and chordae occur and lead to valvular stenosis and/or regurgitation...
If the markings you have observed are romboid or kite-shaped then the person has small-vessel vasculopathy,(vasculitis or pseudovasculitis). Such markings are pathognomic for small-vessel vasculopathy.
[thrombophilia] may lead to long-term swelling and heaviness in a proportion of cases due to damage to valves in the veins.