Every leg vein has tiny one-way valves that push blood UP against gravity, back to the heart. When these valves leak or fail, blood pools downward, the vein walls stretch, and you develop varicose veins. But what makes the valves fail in the first place?
Below are the 9 real, evidence-backed causes — separated into things you cannot control and things you absolutely can.
1. Genetics — by far the #1 cause
If both your parents have varicose veins, your lifetime risk is 89%. If one parent does, it's 47%. If neither does, it's 20%.
Why? You inherit the structural protein composition of your vein walls and valves. Some families have weaker collagen-elastin fibres, making valves prone to early failure. There is no "anti-genetic" treatment — but knowing your family history lets you take preventive measures (compression stockings, regular walking, weight control) decades before symptoms appear.
Read more: varicose veins in young people — genetic causes.
2. Prolonged standing or sitting (occupational)
Jobs that involve standing or sitting still for > 4 hours/day double your varicose vein risk. The high-risk professions in India:
- Teachers, lecturers, professors
- Surgeons, dentists, nurses, OT staff
- Shopkeepers, retail/showroom staff
- Traffic police, security guards, soldiers
- Bank clerks, IT professionals (sitting all day is equally bad)
- Drivers (cab, truck, auto)
- Hairdressers, beauticians, tailors
- Factory line workers
The remedy: take a 5-minute walking break every hour, wear graduated compression stockings during work hours, and do calf-pump exercises while standing.
3. Pregnancy — affects 40% of women
Pregnancy is a triple hit on leg veins:
- Hormonal: high progesterone relaxes vein walls (helps the uterus, hurts your veins)
- Mechanical: the growing uterus compresses pelvic veins, blocking return flow from legs
- Blood volume: total blood volume increases 40-50% during pregnancy
Most pregnancy varicose veins improve within 3-6 months postpartum. But if they persist beyond 6 months — especially with second/third pregnancy — they almost always need post-pregnancy varicose vein treatment.
4. Female sex + hormonal changes
Women are 2.5× more likely to develop varicose veins than men. The reasons: pregnancy, oral contraceptive pills (10-15% increased risk), hormone replacement therapy in menopause, and natural cyclical hormone fluctuations that periodically dilate veins.
5. Obesity and rapid weight gain
Every 5-point increase in BMI raises varicose vein risk by 30%. Excess weight increases intra-abdominal pressure, which obstructs venous return from the legs. Belly fat is worse than overall weight in this regard.
Weight loss does NOT make existing varicose veins disappear, but it slows progression dramatically and reduces symptoms by 30-50%.
6. Ageing — natural valve wear
Vein valves naturally lose elasticity after age 40. Vein walls become stiffer and less able to withstand pressure. By age 70, two-thirds of all adults will have some degree of varicose veins.
You can't stop ageing, but you can dramatically slow the process with daily walking, compression stockings, and treating hypertension/diabetes/cholesterol aggressively.
7. Previous deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
If you've had DVT in the past, the deep vein valves were damaged by the clot. Blood reroutes through superficial veins, which then dilate and become varicose. This is called "post-thrombotic syndrome." Treatment requires careful assessment — sometimes the varicose veins are doing useful drainage and should NOT be removed.
8. Hormonal contraception and HRT
Oral contraceptive pills (OCPs) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increase oestrogen, which dilates vein walls. Long-term users have 10-15% higher varicose vein incidence and 3-5× higher DVT risk. If you have a family history of varicose veins, discuss alternative contraception with your gynaecologist.
9. Other contributing factors
- Chronic constipation — repeated straining increases abdominal pressure
- Heavy weight-lifting without compression — squats > 1.5× bodyweight
- Tight clothing — skinny jeans, tight belts, knee-high tight boots
- Frequent hot baths or sauna — heat dilates veins
- Chronic dehydration — thick blood pools more easily
- Smoking — damages all blood vessel walls
- Tall height — > 6 feet adds gravity load on leg veins
Causes you CAN change vs CANNOT change
| Cannot change | Can change |
|---|---|
| Genetics | Daily walking (30 min) |
| Female sex | Compression stockings during standing work |
| Ageing | Maintaining healthy BMI |
| Pregnancy history | Treating chronic constipation |
| Tall height | Quitting smoking |
| Past DVT | Hourly leg movement at desk job |
If you have multiple risk factors — what to do
If you have 3 or more risk factors (e.g. female + family history + standing job + 2 pregnancies), you should:
- Get a baseline Doppler ultrasound now — even without symptoms (₹1,800)
- Wear 20-30 mmHg compression stockings during work
- Walk 30 minutes daily, do calf-pump exercises every hour
- Maintain BMI < 25
- Annual vein check-up after age 35
Early detection means a 25-minute laser closure costing ₹35,000-65,000. Late detection means months of ulcer dressings and lost work. Book your baseline Doppler.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are varicose veins genetic?
Yes — heredity is the strongest single risk factor. If both parents have varicose veins, your lifetime risk is 89%. If one parent does, 47%. Inherited weakness in vein wall collagen is the underlying mechanism.
Can standing for long hours cause varicose veins?
Yes. Standing or sitting still for more than 4 hours daily doubles your varicose vein risk. Teachers, surgeons, retail workers, drivers, and IT professionals are highest risk groups.
Why do varicose veins happen during pregnancy?
Three reasons: progesterone relaxes vein walls, the growing uterus compresses pelvic veins blocking leg drainage, and total blood volume increases 40-50%. Most resolve postpartum but may persist after multiple pregnancies.
Can young people get varicose veins?
Yes. Strong family history can cause varicose veins as early as age 15-20. Hereditary cases tend to be more severe and progress faster than age-related cases.
Can varicose veins be prevented?
Genetic risk cannot be eliminated, but progression can be dramatically slowed by daily walking, compression stockings during long standing/sitting, weight control, treating constipation, avoiding tight clothes, and quitting smoking.
Does obesity cause varicose veins?
Obesity does not directly cause varicose veins, but it accelerates progression. Every 5-point BMI increase raises risk by 30%. Belly fat increases abdominal pressure which obstructs venous return from legs.
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