Leading the Fight Against Vascular Disease in Silicon Valley

When Experience Leads—Others Imitate

In Silicon Valley, people expect excellence—not slogans. At South Bay Vascular Center & Vein Institute, we’ve set that standard for almost three decades. While others chase profits, we pursue outcomes.  Our care model is simple and sacred:

One Patient. One Doctor. One Nurse.

Every patient is personally evaluated by a board-certified vascular surgeon, not an NP, PA, or a marketing “vein specialist.” At South Bay Vascular, doctors—not financial managers—make the final call on your care.

Because for us, medicine isn’t a business strategy. It’s a calling.


The Vein Industry’s Dirty Secret

Scroll through social media and you’ll see it: endless ads from national “vein centers” promising Harvard-trained vein doctors, celebrity legs, and quick, painless fixes.
But look closer—many of these “experts” are anesthesiologists, pain doctors, or radiologists, not vascular surgeons. They’ve traded the operating room for an Instagram feed and call it innovation.

Treating varicose veins doesn’t make you a vascular surgeon—any more than test-driving a car makes you an engineer. A vascular surgeon is trained to understand the entire circulatory system—arteries, veins, and microvessels—across every organ of the body. They don’t just remove veins for cosmetics; they save legs, prevent strokes, and restore life to limbs most others would amputate.


What Makes South Bay Vascular Different

We treat the full spectrum of vascular disease—arterial blockages, aneurysms, carotid disease, non-healing wounds, and complex venous disorders.

Our surgeons trained at Columbia, UCSF, Washington University, NYU, and Harvard, and our results speak for themselves: thousands of successful limb-salvage cases, wound closures, and restored lives.

But our success didn’t come from fancy marketing. It came from doing the hard work—day after day, year after year, one patient at a time.

We don’t imitate others; we lead.


The Silicon Valley Analogy That Says It All

You can buy a smartphone that looks like an iPhone—but you’ll know the difference the moment you touch it:

Precision, craftsmanship, performance—those aren’t branding.

They’re the product of mastery.

That’s the same difference between a national “vein clinic” franchise and a true vascular surgery practice. Both may promise results, but only one is built from the inside out—designed by surgeons who understand every layer of vascular anatomy and who’ve spent their lives repairing what others only gloss over.

You don’t entrust your heart to a podiatrist. Why trust your circulation to a part-time “vein doctor”?


Doctors, Not Marketers

At South Bay Vascular, every diagnosis and every procedure decision is made by a board-certified vascular surgeon. We don’t delegate your health to staff with limited training or chase profits with unnecessary procedures. Our team includes highly trained nurses, registered vascular technologists, and surgeons working in perfect alignment—an ecosystem built on integrity, not income. A model we pioneered; not something we copied.

We’ve watched national chains expand through financial engineering—backed by private equity firms that see patients as revenue streams. That’s not us.

Our success was earned by putting patients first, not profits. Always has been. Always will be.


Now Is the Time

As the year draws to a close, most patients have already met their insurance deductibles—making this the perfect time to schedule vein or circulation treatments before 2026 resets your out-of-pocket costs.

Don’t wait. Varicose veins are more than cosmetic—they can signal deeper, dangerous circulatory issues.
Our Campbell-based outpatient vascular center offers same-day evaluations, advanced ultrasound diagnostics, and minimally invasive treatments—all performed by board-certified vascular surgeons.

If you want authentic expertise, decades of experience in the community setting and not advertising gloss, you’ll find it here.


Experience Matters—And It Shows

From Campbell to Santa Cruz, Gilroy to Fremont, and soon our new East San Jose office, South Bay Vascular continues to lead the fight against vascular disease throughout Silicon Valley. We didn’t buy this reputation; we didn’t copy the model for success from another vascular surgical practice: We earned it—one healed wound, one saved limb, and one grateful family at a time.

Because real care can’t be franchised. It’s built—by hand, by heart, and by the hands of surgeons who still believe medicine is about humanity, not margins.

If you or anyone you know suffers from a circulatory illness; require dialysis care; can’t sleep at night because of throbbing pain in your leg; or has varicose veins or swollen legs, call us today to schedule an appointent at 408-376-3626.

WE CAN HELP!

South Bay Vascular Center and Vein Institute

Leading the Fight against Vascular Disease In Santa Clara County for almost 30 years.

Leading the Fight Against Vascular Disease in Santa Clara County: When Imitation Falls Short

Leadership Isn’t Claimed. It’s Proven.

For almost three decades, South Bay Vascular Center & Vein Institute has lived that leadership—brick by brick, patient by patient, and community by community across Santa Clara County.

While others copy our look, language, and even our structure, one truth remains: when the moment of truth comes—when a patient’s limb, life, and future hang in the balance—imitation always falls short.

At South Bay Vascular, we don’t follow trends. We set standards. And for nearly thirty years, those standards have defined what exceptional vascular care looks like in Silicon Valley.


Expanding Our Reach: The Movement Grows

Success breeds success. That’s why the best of the best are joining us.

We are proud to announce that our fifth office—located in East San Jose—is on track to open before the end of 2025. This expansion will bring our nationally recognized vascular expertise closer to more patients than ever before, offering faster access to advanced diagnostics, minimally invasive endovascular procedures, and limb-salvage care.

From Campbell to Gilroy, Santa Cruz to Fremont, and soon East San Jose, every South Bay Vascular office shares one DNA:

  • IAC-accredited vascular laboratories staffed by registered vascular technologists.

  • A nationally accredited ambulatory surgery center offering cutting-edge endovascular procedures without hospital delays.

  • Direct physician oversight at every step of diagnosis, treatment, and recovery.

Our expansion isn’t about empire building—it’s about impact. The need is great, and our commitment is greater.


World-Class Physicians. One Shared Vision.

South Bay Vascular continues to attract the best vascular surgeons in the region—not because they need a job, but because they recognize a mission worth joining.

Dr. Ruby Lo, who trained at Harvard, taught at Brown University, and spent three years at another general surgical practice, experienced firsthand how far ahead of the curve South Bay Vascular truly is. She chose to join us because excellence recognizes excellence.

Dr. Ryan Gupta, a board-eligible vascular surgeon soon to be fully board-certified, brings exceptional skill in the latest minimally invasive and endovascular techniques. His technical mastery, humility, and hunger for perfection represent the future of our specialty.

Together, under the leadership of Dr. Polly Kokinos, a trailblazing vascular surgeon with almost three decades of independent practice in Silicon Valley, our team continues to set the pace—proving that leadership isn’t inherited or imitated. It’s earned.


Innovation That Protects Patients

Our independence allows us to innovate—not imitate.

We built and operate our own nationally accredited ambulatory surgery center to deliver complex vascular procedures without hospital bureaucracy.
We maintain a fully staffed, on-site IAC-accredited vascular lab where studies are performed and interpreted by vascular surgeons—not delegated to non-specialists.
We invest relentlessly in new imaging technologies, hybrid endovascular systems, and physician training so that no patient ever hears, “There’s nothing more we can do.”

These are not buzzwords or borrowed blueprints—they are the fruits of years of sacrifice, reinvestment, and clinical discipline.

Others may now check similar boxes, but checklists don’t save limbs—experience, integrity, and judgment do.


Why “Same Certifications” Doesn’t Mean “Same Care”

Let’s be honest. Many of the offices that once looked to South Bay Vascular for inspiration now boast the same accreditations, same machines, and same marketing phrases.

But shared form is not shared substance.

A practice can buy the same ultrasound equipment—but not the wisdom that interprets what it reveals.
It can copy our procedures—but not our discipline.
It can mirror our website—but not our results.

That’s why we remind patients: certifications are the floor—not the ceiling. What matters most is who stands behind the credential.

At South Bay Vascular, it’s the physicians themselves—not physician extenders—who meet, evaluate, and operate on every patient. Our surgeons don’t outsource their responsibility or hide behind corporate layers. We shoulder it personally, every single day.

That’s the difference between having accreditation and living accreditation.


The Truth Patients Deserve

Vascular disease is unforgiving. Delay, misdiagnosis, or poor technique can cost a limb—or a life.

So yes, you’ll find other practices advertising “accredited labs” and “limb-salvage programs.” But when you look deeper, ask:

  • Who actually reviews your vascular studies? A certified vascular surgeon—or a mid-level provider?

  • Who makes your treatment decisions? A doctor you’ve met—or a system administrator balancing quotas?

  • How many years—not months—has the practice sustained independent, physician-driven excellence?

Your life depends on the answers.

At South Bay Vascular, those answers are clear: real surgeons, real results, and a record that spans nearly 30 years of proven excellence in limb salvage, amputation prevention, and vascular innovation. At South Bay Vascular our goal is simple: To Earn Your Trust.

We didn’t arrive here by copying anyone. Others arrived here by copying us.


The Path Forward

As we open our fifth office in East San Jose, our mission endures:
to fight vascular disease with courage, compassion, and integrity.

Because when the stakes are high—and they always are—only leadership born of conviction can make the difference between walking and never walking again.

South Bay Vascular Center & Vein Institute
Campbell • Gilroy • Fremont • Santa Cruz • Coming Soon: East San Jose
Call (408) 376-3626 or visit southbayvascular.com to schedule your consultation.

Leading The Fight Against Vascular Disease In Santa Clara County

Introduction: Leadership vs. Imitation

In medicine, as in life, leadership cannot be borrowed. It must be lived.

In Santa Clara County, South Bay Vascular Center & Vein Institute has spent decades forging a path as an independent vascular surgery practice—building, brick by brick, the trust of patients, families, and referring physicians across the region. Our mission has never been about chasing trends or money; it has been about fighting vascular disease with courage, compassion, and integrity.

Others may attempt to copy the outer trappings of our work—our blogs, our offices, our programs, even our accreditations. But patients deserve to know the truth: there is only one practice that has consistently led the fight against vascular disease in this community. That practice is South Bay Vascular. And that’s why more indendent community physicians refer their vascular patients to South Bay Vascular than to all the other independent vascular surgical practices in the valley combined.

From Salaried Security to Community Service: Two Different Journeys

Many vascular surgeons in Santa Clara County built their careers within large, closed hospital systems. There is no question these institutions provide valuable training and offer stable careers. But salaried work within a hospital system is not the same as the courage, risk, and relentless dedication required to build and sustain independent practice.

At South Bay Vascular, we chose the harder road. We invested in facilities, equipment, accreditation, and above all—patients. Every decision we’ve made has been rooted in service to the community, not a guaranteed paycheck. Our goal is and always has been to earn the trust of our patients to serve as their doctors.

Some who spent the majority of their careers sheltered by salaried positions later attempted to cross into private practice. Without the hard-won experience of independence, they needed a blueprint. Unfortunately, our own generosity once opened the door to that blueprint. A former colleague came into our practice, studied our processes, forms, and procedures, and then attempted to replicate them elsewhere.

This history is not about personal grievance; it is about truth. The difference between us is stark: we pioneered the model of independent vascular excellence in Santa Clara County—others have tried to imitate it for financial gain.

Integrity at the Core of Our Mission

True leadership in medicine is not defined by titles or borrowed structures. It is defined by the choices a practice makes when no one is watching:

  • Do you invest in your own nationally accredited ambulatory surgery center rather than relying on hospital availability?
  • Do you commit to an on-site, IAC-accredited vascular lab so patients can receive accurate diagnoses without delay?
  • Do you publish hundreds of original educational blogs to arm patients with knowledge—long before it was fashionable?
  • Do you encourage second opinions when patients are told amputation is their only option?

South Bay Vascular has answered “yes” to each of these questions for decades. This is not marketing. This is lived commitment.

By contrast, copying forms, processes, or even website themes may create the appearance of leadership—but appearance is not reality. Integrity cannot be imitated.

Why “Leading the Fight” Matters

Vascular disease is devastating. Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and critical limb ischemia (CLI) destroy lives, families, and futures if not treated with skill and urgency. Non-healing wounds and diabetic vascular complications often lead to unnecessary amputations—especially when patients do not have access to experienced vascular surgeons.

At South Bay Vascular, we have dedicated our careers to limb salvage and amputation prevention. We fight for patients who have been told elsewhere that there is “nothing more to be done.” Our record speaks for itself: legs saved, lives restored, families preserved. At South Bay Vascular Center “we offer hope when others say there is none”

To lead this fight requires more than credentials on paper. It requires:

  • Decades of independent practice, unafraid of the risk and responsibility that comes with it.
  • A willingness to invest in facilities that meet national standards, not simply to check accreditation boxes but to raise the bar for patient care.
  • A proven culture of advocacy that encourages patients to question, to learn, and to demand better.

Others may now claim similar accreditations or mimic our programs. But they are responding to a standard we set. They are following a trail we blazed.

Patients Deserve to Know the Difference

When two practices appear similar on the surface, patients may struggle to know where to turn. That is why we urge families to look deeper.

Ask these questions:

  1. How long has your practice served the community as an independent vascular surgery center—not as part of a closed hospital system?
  2. Do you have a documented track record of publishing patient education for years, not just recently?
  3. Did your practice pioneer local programs such as amputation-prevention campaigns, medical mentorship programs, and public outreach on PAD?
  4. What was your practice’s origin story: was it born of conviction to serve, or was it a late-stage jump motivated by financial opportunity?

The answers matter. Because when your limb—and your life—are at stake, you deserve more than imitation. You deserve leadership.

The Weight of Experience

Our senior surgeon, Dr. Polly Kokinos, has been at the forefront of vascular surgery in Silicon Valley for decades. She and her colleagues did not step into independence as a late-career experiment. They built it, sustained it, and continue to lead it with every patient encounter.

This depth of experience shows in our outcomes. It shows in our growth. It shows in our partnerships with wound care centers, primary care physicians, and podiatrists. It shows in the trust families place in us when they seek second opinions. And it shows in the generations of patients who return to us because they know we care about them—not just about revenue.

The Cost of Cutting Corners

The tragedy of vascular disease is that it punishes delay and rewards diligence. In some instances,  vascular surgery offices employ the help of physician extenders (NP’s and PA’s) to see their patients. As good as they may be, PA’s and NP’s are not doctors: A missed diagnosis, a misread ultrasound, or an unnecessary amputation can mean the difference between walking and never walking again. At South Bay Vascular Center, every patient consults with a board certified Vascular Surgeon before ever being prescribed a procedure. Experience matters!

That is why South Bay Vascular has never cut corners. We built an accredited vascular lab on site. We fought for our own surgery center. We staffed with registered vascular technologists. We maintained independence to protect our patients from bureaucratic delay and we fight every day as we lead the charge against vascular disease in Santa Clara County.

Imitators may eventually catch up to the form of what we do—but the spirit behind it cannot be copied. For us, these investments were never about competing with others. They were about protecting patients.

A Call to Patients: Demand More

If you are facing vascular disease, do not settle for surface appearances. Do not assume that every vascular practice operates with the same depth of integrity or the same mission-driven focus.

Demand to know:

  • How long has the practice been independently serving your community?
  • Are their surgeons deeply experienced in private practice pathways, or are they recent transplants from large salaried systems?
  • Is their patient education authentic, consistent, and rooted in clinical authority—or does it read like borrowed content?

Your health, your limb, and your life are too valuable to entrust to anyone but true leaders.

Conclusion: Why We Lead

South Bay Vascular Center & Vein Institute is more than a clinic. We are a movement—leading the fight against vascular disease in Santa Clara County with courage, compassion, and integrity.

Others may try to mirror what we do. They may even succeed in copying the outer forms of our work. But leadership cannot be cloned. It must be lived, day after day, in the operating room, in the exam room, in the vascular lab, and in the heart of every physician who chooses patients over profit.

For decades, we have chosen that path. And we will continue to lead—because our community deserves nothing less. And for that very reason, we now serve patients in 4 offices; Campbell, Gilroy, Santa Cruz and Fremont.

If you or someone you love is facing vascular disease, trust the leaders who set the standard. Call South Bay Vascular at (408) 376-3626 to schedule your consultation.