Why Same-Day Duplex Ultrasound is the Gold Standard in Vein Diagnosis

If you’ve ever been told you have varicose veins and wondered what happens next, you’re probably familiar with the basics — compression stockings, perhaps a referral, maybe a vague mention of sclerotherapy or laser treatment.

What you’re less likely to have heard about is the step that determines whether any of those treatments will actually work.

That step is duplex ultrasound mapping. And in clinics that take vein health seriously, it happens before anything else.

Why Surface Treatment Without Mapping Often Fails

This is where many patients run into trouble — not because they chose the wrong treatment, but because the underlying cause was never properly identified before treatment began.

Imagine a leaking tap. You can mop the floor as many times as you like, but until someone turns off the water at the source, the problem keeps returning.

The venous system works in a similar way. When reflux is present in a deeper feeding vein and only the surface tributaries are treated, the underlying pressure remains. Blood continues to pool and back-fill through the same pathways. Within months — sometimes weeks — the visible veins return, and occasionally new ones appear alongside them.

Recurrence after vein treatment is not inevitable. But it is far more likely when the source of reflux hasn’t been mapped and addressed first.

Research supports this consistently. Studies examining recurrence rates after sclerotherapy found that patients treated without prior ultrasound mapping had significantly higher rates of returning varicosities compared to those who underwent comprehensive duplex assessment beforehand. In some reviews, the difference in five-year recurrence rates between mapped and unmapped treatment cohorts exceeded 40 per cent.

That’s not a marginal difference. It’s the difference between a treatment that holds and one that doesn’t.

Ultrasound-Guided Injection: Precision Under Pressure

For many patients, treatment involves ultrasound-guided sclerotherapy — a technique where a sclerosing agent is injected directly into the affected vein under real-time ultrasound visualisation.

This is not the same as surface sclerotherapy, where injections are placed into visually identified vessels at the skin’s surface. Ultrasound-guided injection targets deeper veins that can’t be seen with the naked eye, guided entirely by the live ultrasound image.

The challenge is that it requires doing two demanding things simultaneously.

With one hand, the clinician holds the ultrasound probe in position, maintaining the target vessel clearly in frame. With the other, they introduce a fine-gauge needle at the correct angle, advance it into the vessel, confirm intraluminal placement on screen, and then inject the sclerosant — all while monitoring the surrounding tissue for any signs of extravasation or unintended spread.

The margin for error is narrow. Misplacement of the sclerosant outside the vessel causes tissue damage. Injection into an adjacent artery carries serious risk. Both are avoidable with adequate skill and experience. Neither is avoidable without them.

This is why ultrasound-guided sclerotherapy is considered a procedural skill, not simply an extension of standard sclerotherapy. It requires dedicated training, regular practice, and a level of hand-eye coordination that only develops through volume and repetition.

Same-Day Scanning and Treatment: Why Timing Matters

Some clinics separate the duplex mapping appointment from the treatment appointment. There are circumstances where that’s appropriate — particularly in complex cases where findings need to be reviewed before a treatment plan is finalised.

But when a same-day approach is clinically appropriate, it carries a real advantage: the information from the scan is used immediately, while the clinician’s understanding of that individual’s anatomy is freshest.

Same-day scanning and treatment keeps the clinical picture intact. The clinician moves directly from diagnosis to intervention with a complete mental model of that patient’s venous system. Treatment decisions are informed by the most current and detailed understanding possible.

It also reduces the burden on patients, who would otherwise need to attend multiple appointments across separate days — an important consideration for those travelling distances or managing busy schedules.

What Accurate Mapping Means for Outcomes

The connection between thorough pre-treatment assessment and durable outcomes is well-established in the clinical literature.

When the source of reflux is correctly identified and treated before attention turns to the surface veins, recurrence rates drop substantially. Patient-reported satisfaction rises. The number of repeat treatment sessions decreases. And the likelihood of progressive venous disease — including complications such as lipodermatosclerosis, ulceration, and deep venous thrombosis — is meaningfully reduced.

The evidence is consistent enough that leading phlebological societies, including the Australasian College of Phlebology, recommend duplex ultrasound as a prerequisite for any significant vein treatment. It isn’t a premium add-on. It’s the accepted standard of care.

Clinics that skip this step aren’t offering a simpler version of the same treatment. They’re offering a different treatment altogether — one with a fundamentally higher chance of not working.

Getting It Right From the Start

Vein disease is often dismissed as a cosmetic concern. But for most people living with it, the reality is more than that — it’s aching legs at the end of the day, swelling that worsens in summer, and a slow erosion of confidence in how their legs look and feel.

Treatment can genuinely change that. But it does so reliably only when the full picture is understood first.

Same-day duplex ultrasound isn’t a marketing term. It’s a commitment to doing the diagnostic work properly — so that what follows is targeted, informed, and built to last.

Because the best outcomes aren’t the ones that look good straight after treatment. They’re the ones that hold up a year later, five years later — quietly, without demanding a return visit.

And that starts with getting the diagnosis right.

Beyond Cosmetics: The Medical Progression of Untreated Varicose Veins

Most people notice varicose veins and think: cosmetic problem. Something to deal with eventually, when there's time, when it feels urgent enough.

But here's what changes that thinking — understanding what's actually happening inside the vein wall, and where it leads when left alone.

Varicose veins are a progressive condition. They don't stay still. For many patients, the trajectory moves from mild discomfort to genuine medical complexity — slowly, quietly, and often without the dramatic warning signs people expect.

Dr. Nolan, the founder of Odyssey Vein Clinic and a specialist with over 8,000 successful vein procedures, sees this pattern regularly. Patients arrive having monitored their veins for years, certain things were stable, only to discover the disease had been advancing the entire time.

That's the thing about venous insufficiency. It's easy to underestimate.

It Usually Starts With Aching and Heaviness

The earliest symptoms are easy to explain away.

A heaviness in the legs after a long day. An ache that arrives in the afternoon and eases when you lie down. Some mild swelling around the ankles by evening.

These aren't dramatic symptoms. They're the kind of thing people chalk up to being on their feet too long, getting older, or not drinking enough water.

But clinically, this stage — classified as C2 in the CEAP (Clinical, Aetiological, Anatomical, Pathophysiological) classification system — marks the point where incompetent valves in the superficial venous system are already failing to return blood efficiently against gravity. Venous hypertension begins to build. Pressure in the lower limb veins increases chronically.

The body compensates. For a while.

Then it stops compensating as well.

The Swelling Becomes Harder to Ignore

As venous hypertension persists, fluid begins leaking from the capillaries into surrounding tissue. This is oedema — and it's more than discomfort.

At this point, patients often describe their legs as feeling 'full' or tight by the end of the day. Shoes that fit in the morning feel snug by afternoon. Socks leave marks.

This progresses to C3 in the CEAP classification: chronic oedema. The swelling may partially resolve overnight with elevation, but it returns. Over time, it becomes less responsive to rest.

It's also at this stage that the risk of skin changes begins to escalate — and that's where the clinical picture gets more serious.

Skin Changes: The Visible Evidence of Internal Damage

Chronically elevated venous pressure doesn't just cause swelling. It causes structural changes to the skin and subcutaneous tissue that are largely irreversible once established.

The first sign is often haemosiderin staining — a brownish discolouration of the skin, typically around the inner ankle and lower leg. This happens when red blood cells escape from congested capillaries and break down, depositing iron into the tissue.

Then comes lipodermatosclerosis: a hardening and thickening of the skin and underlying fat, sometimes accompanied by a reddish-brown pigmentation and a characteristic 'inverted champagne bottle' appearance of the lower leg. The skin feels indurated — firmer than normal — and the tissue beneath it loses its elasticity.

These changes are classified as C4a and C4b in the CEAP system. They represent significant chronic venous disease, not a cosmetic concern.

They also signal that the tissue is under sustained physiological stress — and that the next stage is closer than most patients realise.

Varicose Eczema: Inflammation at the Surface

Varicose eczema — also called venous eczema or stasis dermatitis — is one of the more distressing complications for patients, partly because it looks and feels like a skin problem rather than a vascular one.

The skin becomes itchy, red, scaly, and inflamed. In some cases it weeps. In others it becomes thickened and leathery over time. It tends to affect the lower legs and ankles, often bilaterally, and it doesn't respond well to standard eczema treatments because the underlying cause is haemodynamic, not dermatological.

Scratching — a natural response to the itch — breaks the already fragile skin barrier, introducing the risk of infection and, critically, creating a pathway to ulceration.

Without treating the underlying venous disease, varicose eczema is chronic. It can be managed on the surface, but it will return.

Thrombophlebitis: When the Vein Itself Becomes Inflamed

Thrombophlebitis is a complication that patients sometimes describe as a sudden change — a hardening along a visible vein, redness, warmth, and localised pain.

What's happening is inflammation of the vein wall, combined with clot formation within the lumen of the varicosity. In superficial veins, this is termed superficial thrombophlebitis (SVT), and while it's usually not life-threatening on its own, it requires proper clinical evaluation.

The reason is propagation risk.

Superficial thrombus that extends toward the saphenofemoral or saphenopopliteal junction — where the superficial system meets the deep venous system — carries a risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT).

Venous Ulcers: The Most Serious End of the Spectrum

Venous leg ulcers represent the most advanced stage of chronic venous disease — CEAP class C6 — and they are far more common than people expect.

They account for approximately 70–80% of all chronic leg ulcers in Australia, and they carry a significant burden: pain, restricted mobility, wound care demands, repeated infection, and substantial impact on quality of life.

A venous ulcer typically develops in the 'gaiter zone' — the area between the ankle and mid-calf — often at the medial malleolus. The wound is usually shallow with irregular borders, surrounded by lipodermatosclerotic or eczematous skin. It may be exudative, and it may have been present for months or years.

What's particularly important clinically is that venous ulcers will not heal reliably without treatment of the underlying venous insufficiency. Compression therapy alone can close many ulcers — but the recurrence rate without definitive venous intervention approaches 70% at five years.

With appropriate treatment — whether that's endovenous laser ablation, radiofrequency ablation, or ultrasound-guided sclerotherapy, depending on the anatomy — healing rates improve substantially and recurrence risk reduces dramatically.

Dr. Nolan has managed a significant number of complex venous ulcer cases at Odyssey Vein Clinic. The consistent finding: the longer the underlying disease had been present without treatment, the more difficult and prolonged the healing process.

When to Monitor — and When to Act

This is where an honest, patient-first approach matters most.

Not every varicose vein requires urgent intervention. But not every varicose vein is safe to simply watch, either. The distinction depends on what's happening clinically — and that requires assessment, not assumptions.

It's reasonable to monitor if:

Seek a clinical review promptly if:

Seek emergency assessment if:

The Honest Truth About 'Just Watching It'

After more than 8,000 procedures, Dr. Nolan's clinical perspective is clear: the patients with the most complex presentations are rarely those who sought help too soon. They're the ones who waited longer than they needed to.

Not because they were careless. Because varicose veins progress slowly. Because the early stages feel manageable. Because people assume that if it were serious, something would feel more obviously wrong.

Chronic venous disease doesn't always announce itself. It accumulates.

The good news — and it is genuinely good news — is that modern vein treatment is minimally invasive, highly effective, and available without hospital admission. For most patients, the procedures performed at Odyssey Vein Clinic are with minimal downtime and durable long-term results.

But the window for the simplest intervention narrows as the disease progresses.

Getting a Proper Assessment

If you've been watching varicose veins for a while — or if you're noticing any of the changes described above — the most useful next step isn't more waiting. It's a proper duplex ultrasound assessment that maps the anatomy of your venous system and identifies where reflux is occurring.

That information tells you — and your treating clinician — exactly what you're working with and what options are appropriate.

Odyssey Vein Clinic offers consultations with Dr. Nolan for patients across Australia. The approach is straightforward: understand the disease fully, explain the options honestly, and let patients make informed decisions about their care.

Because the goal isn't just to treat varicose veins. It's to stop the progression before it takes something harder to get back.

The Science of Recovery: Why Walking and Compression Are Crucial After UGS

If you've just had Ultrasound-Guided Sclerotherapy (UGS), your clinician probably handed you a list of post-care instructions and said something like: "Walk for 30 minutes straight after the procedure. Wear your compression stockings for two weeks. No long-haul flights or heavy gym sessions."

Simple enough, right?

Except most people hear those rules and think, "Do they really matter that much?"

They do. And the reason why comes down to something much more precise than general caution—it's haemodynamics.

What's Actually Happening Inside Your Veins Right After UGS

To understand why recovery protocol exists the way it does, it helps to understand what sclerotherapy is actually doing at a vascular level.

UGS involves injecting a sclerosing agent—typically a foamed solution of polidocanol or sodium tetradecyl sulphate—directly into a diseased vein under ultrasound guidance. The chemical irritates the endothelial lining of the vessel wall, triggering an inflammatory cascade that causes the vein to spasm, collapse, and eventually fibrosis into a non-functional cord of scar tissue.

That conversion process—from open, blood-carrying vessel to inert fibrous tissue—doesn't happen overnight. It unfolds over days to weeks. And what you do in that window has a direct bearing on two things: the risk of Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT), and how cleanly the treated vein resolves.

That's why post-procedure behaviour isn't optional. It's physiologically active.

The 30-Minute Walk: Driving Blood Through the Right Channels

The instruction to walk immediately after the procedure surprises some patients. They assume rest would make more sense.

It doesn't—and here's why.

Your legs contain two venous systems: a superficial network close to the skin (the one UGS targets), and a deep venous network buried within the muscle compartments. These systems communicate through perforating veins that act as one-way valves.

When a superficial vein is sclerosed and taken offline, the blood that previously travelled through it needs somewhere to go. It reroutes—through perforating veins—into the deep venous system.

Venous stasis is one of three components of Virchow's Triad—the classic clinical framework for understanding DVT formation. The triad identifies stasis, hypercoagulability, and endothelial injury as the three conditions that together create clot risk. After UGS, endothelial injury is a given—that's the mechanism of the treatment. Hypercoagulability is present to some degree simply because the body is responding to the chemical insult. What you can actively control is stasis.

This is addressed directly by walking. With every step, the calf muscles act as a peripheral venous pump, contracting and squeezing the deep veins, pushing blood up toward the heart. Research published in Phlebology and consistent with findings from the American Venous Forum shows that when the calf muscle pump is activated, deep venous flow velocity is significantly increased and venous transit time is reduced. Post-sclerotherapy patients have shown that a brisk 30-minute walk can clear residual sclerosant from the treated segment, reduce local inflammatory by-products and maintain adequate flow through the deep system.

Put simply: walking is not an indicator of comfort. It is a dynamic haemodynamic intervention.

Compression Stockings: Sustained Mechanical Support Over Two Weeks

The compression requirement is where patients most commonly cut corners. Two weeks feels long. Stockings aren't comfortable in warm weather. By day four or five, the treated leg looks fine and feels manageable—so why keep going?

Because the process happening beneath the skin is still far from complete.

Medical-grade graduated compression stockings—typically prescribed at 20–30 mmHg following UGS—work by applying external circumferential pressure that reduces the cross-sectional diameter of superficial and deep veins. This has several clinically significant effects.

First, venous reflux is reduced by compression. In the post-procedure leg, the vein walls are inflamed and the sclerosant is still active. Any residual venous incompetence in adjacent vessels can lead to pooling of blood in the treated segment. This is mechanically restricted by compression, which keeps the blood flowing forward rather than allowing it to pool.

Second, interstitial oedema is reduced by compression. Sclerotherapy causes a local inflammatory reaction which results in localised capillary leakage - fluid leaking out of the vessels into the surrounding area. This swelling compresses local lymphatic channels and decreases the fluid clearance that the body needs to process the treated vein without enough compression. Sustained compression counteracts this by maintaining external pressure gradients that maintain venous return and lymphatic drainage.

Third—and this is the one most directly relevant to DVT risk—compression has been shown in multiple randomised controlled trials to reduce the incidence of superficial thrombophlebitis extending into the deep system after sclerotherapy. A 2019 systematic review in the *European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery* found that patients who wore compression consistently for two weeks post-UGS had significantly lower rates of deep venous thrombus extension compared to those who used compression for less than seven days.

Two weeks isn't an arbitrary number. It reflects the time window in which the treated vein transitions from an acutely inflamed, chemically irritated vessel to a stabilising fibrous structure. Until that stabilisation is sufficiently advanced, the risk profile remains elevated—and compression remains active medicine.

Avoiding Flights and Heavy Gym Work: The Other Side of the Equation

The long-haul flight and heavy exercise restrictions relate to a different set of risks, but the underlying physiology ties directly into everything above.

Long-haul flights, generally taken to mean flights in excess of four to six hours, expose passengers to conditions of prolonged immobility, low cabin humidity and reduced atmospheric pressure. Each of these factors decreases venous return individually. Together, they create conditions that significantly increase the risk of DVT in any patient. In someone with recent UGS, where the conditions of Virchow's Triad are already partly met, the added haemodynamic stress of a long flight can push a subclinical process into a clinical event. Most vascular specialists recommend avoiding flights longer than four hours for at least two weeks after the procedure.

Heavy resistance exercise introduces a different problem: intrathoracic pressure changes.

When you perform heavy compound lifts—squats, deadlifts, overhead presses—the Valsalva manoeuvre increases intra-abdominal and intrathoracic pressure significantly. This pressure is transmitted retrograde through the venous system, briefly opposing the return of blood from the lower limbs. In a healthy venous system with competent valves, this is tolerated well. In a post-sclerotherapy leg with inflamed, chemically disrupted vessels, the repeated retrograde pressure waves can mechanically stress the treated segment, potentially disrupting the early fibrous organisation of the collapsing vein.

This delays the conversion of the treated vessel into inert scar tissue—which directly affects the aesthetic outcome.

The Link Between Recovery Compliance and Scar Tissue Conversion

That last point is worth dwelling on, because it connects the medical risk management to the cosmetic result patients actually care about.

After UGS, the goal is clean fibrosis. You want the treated vein to collapse completely, form a uniform cord of scar tissue, and be gradually reabsorbed by the body over months. When this process goes smoothly, the vessel disappears. When it doesn't—when there's residual flow through the treated segment, or when the inflammatory process is disrupted by haemodynamic stress—the outcome is often pigmentation, a palpable cord that takes longer to resolve, or, in some cases, recanalisation of the vessel.

Walking, compression, and activity restrictions all protect the fibrosis process. They maintain the haemodynamic conditions that allow the treated vein to convert cleanly, without the interference that comes from venous stasis, pressure surges, or inadequate support to adjacent vessels.

The Protocol Is the Treatment

Here's the part that's easy to miss.

The sclerotherapy procedure itself is only one part of what produces the outcome. The post-care protocol is the other part—and it's not supplementary. It's built into the clinical result.

Odyssey’s post-UGS rules are not conservative recommendations hedged for liability. They represent the true physiology of vein wall injury, inflammatory resolution, deep venous haemodynamics and DVT risk stratification. The calf muscle pump is activated by the 30-minute walk. The two weeks of compression preserves venous geometry, through the window of fibrosis. Avoiding flights and heavy lifting takes away the haemodynamic stressors which are most likely to interfere with clean vein conversion.

Follow the protocol, and your body can do exactly what the treatment set it up to do.

Skip it, and you're not just ignoring advice—you're working against the physiology.

The science is fairly clear on this one. Walk. Compress. Wait.

Non-Surgical vs. Surgical Vein Removal: Efficacy, Recovery, and Clinical Outcomes

Varicose veins affect roughly one in three adults at some point in their lives. For most of those people, the question isn’t whether to seek treatment — it’s which treatment to seek. And increasingly, that conversation starts with one method sitting firmly at the top of clinical guidance: ultrasound-guided sclerotherapy, or UGS.

Understanding why requires more than a surface-level comparison. It means looking at what the evidence actually shows — success rates, recovery timelines, procedural risks — and understanding how modern phlebology arrived at its current position.

This is that comparison.

The Traditional Approach: Surgical Stripping

For much of the twentieth century, surgical stripping was the default intervention for symptomatic varicose veins. The procedure involves ligation of the saphenofemoral or saphenopopliteal junction, followed by physical removal of the great or small saphenous vein through a series of incisions.

It works. In appropriately selected patients, surgical stripping produces saphenous vein abolition in approximately 80 to 85 per cent of cases at five-year follow-up. Symptom relief rates are comparable, and for many years this was considered the benchmark.

But the costs are significant.

The procedure requires general or regional anaesthesia. Post-operative recovery typically spans two to four weeks, with patients advised to avoid strenuous activity for the full duration. Wound complications — including haematoma, infection, and nerve injury — occur in a meaningful proportion of cases. Saphenous nerve injury, which produces numbness or paraesthesia along the medial calf, is reported in up to 40 per cent of patients undergoing below-knee stripping. Wound infection rates sit at around three to five per cent, and haematoma formation is documented in up to seven per cent of cases.

There is also the matter of recurrence. Long-term studies — including the landmark REACTIV trial — have demonstrated that surgical recurrence rates at ten years can reach 25 to 30 per cent, driven largely by neovascularisation at the ligation site.

The Modern Standard: Ultrasound-Guided Sclerotherapy

Ultrasound-guided sclerotherapy uses real-time duplex imaging to deliver a sclerosant agent — typically polidocanol or sodium tetradecyl sulphate in foam form — directly into the target vein. The chemical disrupts the vessel’s endothelial lining, triggering fibrosis and permanent closure. No incisions. No anaesthesia. No hospitalisation.

Over the last two decades, clinical evidence to support UGS has matured. Truncal varicosities have been reported to have technical success rates of 85 to 95 percent in pooled data from controlled trials, defined as confirmed venous closure on duplex at twelve weeks. Cumulative success rates improve further when combined with targeted sessions for residual vessels.

Recovery is where the contrast becomes most pronounced. Patients undergoing UGS typically return to normal daily activity within 24 to 48 hours. Compression hosiery is worn for five to seven days post-procedure. There is no wound to manage, no sutures to remove, and no requirement for general anaesthesia — which itself carries non-trivial perioperative risk, particularly in older or medically complex patients.

What the Clinical Guidelines Say

The shift in clinical preference is not simply a matter of patient convenience. It reflects a body of evidence that has accumulated to the point where major bodies have revised their formal positions.

The UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence — NICE — updated its guidance on varicose veins in 2013 and has maintained this position in subsequent reviews. NICE recommends endothermal ablation — laser or radiofrequency — as first-line treatment where suitable, with ultrasound-guided foam sclerotherapy as the recommended second-line option. Surgical intervention is positioned as a last resort, recommended only when minimally invasive techniques are contraindicated or have failed.

This is corroborated by the European Society for Vascular Surgery. Thermal ablation and sclerotherapy are the preferred treatment options in clinical practice guidelines because they are as effective or more effective than surgery but with far less risk to the patient and a faster recovery.

The Australian College of Phlebology also advocates the use of non surgical modalities as first line therapy, with surgical stripping reserved for those cases where the anatomy or vessel characteristics make catheter-based or injection techniques impossible.

Recurrence: The Long-Term Picture

Historically, one of the criticisms levelled at sclerotherapy has been its long-term durability. Early liquid sclerotherapy without imaging guidance was associated with variable results and a relatively high rate of recanalization. That changed with ultrasound guided foam sclerotherapy.

Comparative data at five years suggest that UGS with appropriate technique and adequate follow-up achieves broadly similar recurrence rates to surgery. The REACTIV and RABIT trials, which directly compared surgery with sclerotherapy, found no statistically significant difference in quality-of-life outcomes at five years, although surgery resulted in marginally better freedom from varicosities in selected cases of complex truncal disease.

The key variable is the operator. UGS outcomes are strongly influenced by procedural precision — accurate placement under duplex guidance, appropriate foam concentration, and correct patient positioning. In the hands of an experienced phlebologist, the recurrence rates for UGS are clinically comparable to surgery, without the associated procedural burden.

Risk Profiles: Maintaining an Honest Account

Neither approach is without risk. Objective transparency requires stating both clearly.

Surgical stripping carries the following documented risks:

UGS carries its own risk profile:

Why the Change of Heart—And What it Means in Practice

The argument for minimally invasive approaches is not based on one study or one guideline. It’s the cumulative weight of evidence going one way: equivalent long-term outcomes, much lower procedural risk and a recovery burden that patients can reasonably manage without disrupting work or family life.

Surgery still plays a role. Surgical treatment is still indicated in some anatomical situations, with vessel diameters unsuitable for foam techniques or in case of recurrence after previous endovenous procedures. Phlebology is not a one-size-fits-all discipline.

But the default has changed. Most patients presenting with symptomatic truncal varicosities today 2014 particularly great saphenous vein incompetence 2014 are candidates for non-surgical management. The question worth asking is not: can this be treated surgically? It is: why would we operate when the evidence supports a safer alternative with comparable results?

That shift in framing is what defines modern phlebology.

The Takeaway

Most clinical metrics don’t strongly favour surgical stripping over UGS. The evidence supports non-surgical intervention as the primary line of treatment for the majority of varicose vein patients. Not because it’s newer, but because it consistently demonstrates acceptable efficacy with a substantially more favourable risk and recovery profile.

Clinical reality of contemporary UGS is success rates of 85 to 95 per cent at twelve weeks, return to normal activity within 48 hours, no general anaesthesia and a documented safety record over large patient populations.

Surgery has its role. But it is no longer the starting point.

And understanding that distinction — clearly, technically, honestly — is what allows patients and clinicians to make decisions grounded in evidence rather than habit.

Navigating Varicose Vein Treatment Costs in South Australia: Medicare & Private Health

There’s a moment that’s familiar to a lot of South Australians with varicose veins.

You’ve finally decided to do something about it. You book an appointment. The specialist confirms what you already suspected — treatment is warranted. And then, somewhere between the diagnosis and the conversation about costs, the clarity disappears.

Medicare covers some of it. Private health might cover part of it. And then there’s a gap — sometimes a significant one — that nobody seems to explain until the invoice arrives.

This article breaks it down honestly. The item numbers. The safety net thresholds. The difference between what Medicare considers medically necessary and what it considers cosmetic. And why the public hospital route, once a reliable alternative, is becoming less practical for a growing number of patients.

If you’ve been putting this off because the financial side felt too opaque to navigate, this is the read you’ve been waiting for.

Medicare Coverage: What the Item Numbers Actually Mean

Medicare doesn’t cover varicose vein treatment as a blanket category. Coverage depends on the procedure, the clinical indication, and whether your specialist has used the correct Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item number.

The key item numbers most patients encounter are:

MBS Item NumberProcedureMedicare Benefit (approx.)
32500Injection sclerotherapy — single session$90–$120
32503Injection sclerotherapy — each subsequent session$65–$90
32522Endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) or radiofrequency ablation (RFA) — one vein$330–$400
32523EVLA/RFA — bilateral (both legs, same sitting)$495–$600
32700Phlebectomy (surgical removal) of varicose veins$280–$370

These figures reflect the Medicare Schedule Fee — not the actual fee your specialist charges. Most private vascular surgeons and interventional radiologists bill above the Schedule Fee, sometimes substantially. The gap between what they charge and what Medicare reimburses is your out-of-pocket expense.

item number will be used.

The Medicare Safety Net: How It Works and When It Kicks In

Once your out-of-pocket Medicare costs in a calendar year exceed a threshold, the Medicare Safety Net increases your future rebates for the remainder of that year.

For 2024–2025, the relevant threshold is:

The safety net accumulates across your household. Keep your receipts and make sure your Medicare records are up to date, particularly if you have dependants.

Why Public Hospital Waitlists Are No Longer a Reliable Alternative

It used to be a reasonable option for patients without private cover: wait a bit longer, access treatment through a public hospital, and avoid the out-of-pocket costs.

That window is narrowing.

Across South Australia, waitlists for elective varicose vein procedures at public hospitals have grown significantly. The SA Health System Performance data shows elective surgery category 3 procedures — which is where most non-complicated varicose vein cases are classified — routinely exceed recommended wait times.

Category 3 carries a recommended wait of 365 days. In practice, many patients wait longer. And for ‘non-complicated’ varicose veins — even those causing real discomfort — the pathway to public hospital treatment has become increasingly uncertain.

That’s the clinical reality driving more South Australians toward private clinics, even when they weren’t planning to. Not because they prefer it. Because waiting isn’t really waiting — it’s hoping. And for a condition that can progress to venous ulceration or deep vein complications without intervention, hope isn’t a treatment plan.

For those without hospital cover, this creates a genuine dilemma. The decision isn’t just financial — it’s also clinical.

Extras Cover and Compression Stockings

Compression stockings are a routine part of post-treatment care for varicose vein patients. They’re not optional — they’re a clinical recommendation.

A standard pair of graduated compression stockings (Class 2, 23–32 mmHg) from a medical supply provider typically costs $55–$80. Custom-fitted stockings for patients with more complex presentations can run $120–$180 per pair.

Most private health extras policies that include ‘aids and appliances’ or ‘medical aids’ will provide a rebate of around $40–$60 per pair, up to an annual limit. A number of policies cap the total reimbursement for this category at $200–$300 annually. If you’re purchasing stockings on both legs or replacing them after three to six months — as is often advised — your out-of-pocket cost across the year can still be $80–$200 after the rebate.

It’s worth checking your extras policy before your procedure. If you’re close to your annual limit, timing your stocking purchase to maximise the rebate is a small but practical consideration.

Fee Variation Is Real and Significant

Specialist fees in South Australia vary widely. Two surgeons performing the same procedure at the same facility can charge vastly different amounts. The MBS does not cap what a specialist charges — only what Medicare reimburses. Asking for a written fee estimate before consenting to treatment is your right, and a good clinic will provide one without hesitation.

The Safety Net Resets Each Calendar Year

All Medicare Safety Net thresholds reset on 1 January. If your procedure is in November, the safety net benefits you accumulate won’t carry into your next round of treatment in February. Timing matters, especially if you’re planning staged procedures across multiple sessions.

The Bottom Line

Navigating varicose vein treatment costs in South Australia isn’t complicated once you understand the framework — but the framework does require some effort to understand.

Medicare covers clinically indicated procedures up to the Schedule Fee, with safety net protections that reduce your exposure over time. Private health insurance reduces gaps further, but only if your policy is the right type, your specialist participates in a gap scheme, and your waiting periods are behind you.

Public hospital waitlists, for many patients, are no longer a realistic option for timely treatment. Private clinics are filling that gap — and for patients who go in with clear expectations, the experience is often straightforward.

Ask the right questions early. Get the fee estimate in writing. Confirm your item numbers before you’re on the table. And don’t assume that private health insurance means no out-of-pocket costs — because it rarely does.

What it does mean, when you’ve done the groundwork, is that the financial side stops being a source of anxiety. And that’s a good place to be when you’re making a decision about your health.