Monday, January 13, 2014

Treatment and diagnosis of pressure in the veins

Treatment and diagnosis of vatic ocelot testis
Varicolored: "varicose testicle"
We can define, quite generally, vatic ocelot as "varicose veins of the testicle."
 To understand what happens in vatic ocelot, it is necessary to know that in the veins there are valves to prevent blood that should return to the heart (blood drained) go in the wrong direction (reflow).
Another important concept is that the base of a column of liquid pressure taken by this liquid is very large.
To better understand, just think when one delves, the deeper it goes, the greater the pressure in your ears.
 When a person is standing, the pressure in the leg veins and veins of the testicles (the lower part of the body) is very large.

One might think, then, that everyone should have varicose veins or even vary cockle. But as has been said before, the veins have valves, thus preventing blood "descent".

Many people do not have these valves in the veins of the testicles, or, if they had them, they are too weak, allowing blood to return to the scrotum, increasing pressure on these veins.

 With this, the blood ends up getting "stopped" in the veins, causing them to swell, causing the vat icicle. Vary cockle can occur in any of the testes, or even both.

 But it is more common to happen on the left side. This is because the left renal vein ends in the left renal vein at an angle of 90 °, or right, causing the pressure on that side is higher than the right side, this side in the spermatic vein leads obliquely.

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