5-year-old boy with right jugular vein angina

  Description of the condition:A 5-year-old boy has an angry jugular vein on the right side of his neck, and when he cries hard, the vein on the right side becomes significantly thicker, and after the child stops crying for 1 or 2 seconds, the vein returns to its original state. How should this condition be treated? I hope the doctor will give some advice. How are most of them treated?  Jugular vein anger is a relatively common type of disease in children, mostly caused by the local weakness of the jugular vein wall. When crying, the pressure in the jugular vein increases due to the increase in chest pressure, which causes the weak vein to expand and protrude on the body surface. If the anger is not severe, it can be observed without any treatment and may gradually improve and heal itself as the child develops.  If the degree of anger is heavy, it may lead to the following problems: because the blood vessels are too wide, the local blood flow slows down and the blood is easy to form clots, causing thrombotic diseases; or the local is too inflated, the vein walls are thin, the skin is thin and easy to break, causing heavy bleeding. This often requires surgical treatment, which mainly involves removing the excess vein wall and reducing the vein diameter to a normal degree, or simply ligating the vein if it is not important.