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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Raynauld's disease-numb fingers/toes

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    physician believes that I have Raynauld's disease.

    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/raynaudsdisease.html

    It happens to me too often. And it's not freezin' yet. Seem to have this in past 2 yrs.

    Anyone else???

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
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    2,737
    I have a friend who has it. Pretty tough to be outside for her. I don't have any personal knowledge or advice though. Can you use those handwarmers for skiing?
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
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    4,364
    My grandmother had it and I wonder sometimes if I've inherited it. My fingers and toes hurt pretty bad out in the cold (they burn!) and my hands and fingers definitely turn white, I've never really checked out my toes...
    Hand warmers do help - keeping my hr up when I'm out in the cold helps too. If I keep my core happy and warm usually I can keep my extremities happy too.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Got back from doctor's just now. She confirms for me (don't know about anyone else), that unless my Raynauld's symptoms are combined with other symptoms (rash, etc.), doctors feel no need to test.

    STrange thing is that I only get it under certain conditions...when I'm walking outside...for even only 15 min. or so.

    I've done snowshoeing for hrs. (ie. 4-5 hrs. straight) fand downhill skiing both in the mountains every Christmas holiday (4-5 consecutive days) and I don't get that cold in my extremities. And it is colder in the mountains.

    I honestly thought it was stress pinching one of my nerves....

    And on bike, yes, I do have to be more alert with my glove-wearing.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Flagstaff AZ
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    2,516
    Yep, I have it too! And, it does seem to be strange how it occurs. Sometimes, I get it when it really is not that cold, but sort of that difference between you are still warm and it is just starting to get cold. I will get it when I ride my bike downhill (which is sort of obvious, cold and wind-chill) and when I hike. When I hike it seems like it doesn't have to be that cold. Maybe it has something to do with the blood all going to the legs to keep them going or something? Anyway, it is manageable so far for me. I don't get it too often. But, I knew a lady who could hardly ride in the San Francisco Bay area in the winter cause it was so bad (and SF winters are not that bad). She would use those glove warmers all the time.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    My youngest son, Will, was diagnosed when he was 3. It is exactly like described...that it's not that it's so cold outside, but the relative difference between his body and what he touches or the atmosphere. We figured it out one day on a cool morning in October. We went out the front door barefoot and walked through the grass to the back yard to get the last of the tomatoes. The air temperature was probably about 60 and rising, but the grass was wet with cold dew. By the time we got to the back of the quarter acre, his toes were bright white, and he was screaming in pain as if he'd been walking on glass.

    Another time we were in Indianapolis in winter and it was 5 degrees out with snow on the ground. We stopped the car on the way to the airport so the kids could roll in the snow one last time. He was bundled up, and I had put some mittens on his hands. In the time it took for his brothers to run up the hill and back, he'd never left the side of the car, but was screaming in pain again because his fingers were burning. Pulled the mittens off--bright white fingers.

    The doc said that it can be secondary to another condition, and if it's not, it's more an inconvenience than anything. If it is secondary to another condition, you've got more problems than Reynaud's.

    Curiously, my son has never been one to wear shoes (you can be sensitive to heat, too, and I think he is). Couldn't keep his shoes on for more than an hour when he was little, he hates socks, goes everywhere in slides or barefoot. He seems to have very few episodes at all anymore, but I think he knows how to avoid it, or, he's outgrown it some. He hasn't had a serious episode in probably 5-6 years--it's been so long that he can't remember them. Some of the milder episodes had him coming to ask me if "this was it". (He's 14.)

    A niece has it, too, and she feels like she gets a fast heartbeat when she has an episode.

    I'm sure you'll learn how to compensate. I hope it becomes a non-issue for you.

    Karen

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
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    13,394
    My son has it. It developed when he was a teen. He researched and had an experimental surgery where they cut a nerve to stop the problem and he was "cured." Seriously, usually this has to be done by cracking open your chest, major recovery. He flew to San Antonio with my husband, had the surgery, drove to Austin that night for dinner, got checked out by the doc the next morning and then flew home. They went in through his armpit and the temperature in his hands was like 20 degrees higher immediately after the surgery. Blue Cross paid for all of it, too.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Vernon, British Columbia
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    2,226
    I think this is what our riding buddy has. Consequently, he loves to ride in the heat! One of the things he has done is gone to acupuncture, where she "reset his thermostat". He said it works for him for weeks at a time before he needs it reset again.

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  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Massachusetts
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    I used to know someone who hiked in the winter who had this. I've also heard talks by Dr. Murray Hamlet, who does (or did) cold research for the army. Hamlet claimed that you could treat Raynauld's by standing outside in winter with minimal clothing and your hands in warm water for 10 minutes at a time. It was supposed to retrain your capillaries to open when your body was cold. Not sure if the cure was worse than the disease.
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  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    3,867
    Quote Originally Posted by Robyn Maislin View Post
    My son has it. It developed when he was a teen. He researched and had an experimental surgery where they cut a nerve to stop the problem and he was "cured." Seriously, usually this has to be done by cracking open your chest, major recovery. He flew to San Antonio with my husband, had the surgery, drove to Austin that night for dinner, got checked out by the doc the next morning and then flew home. They went in through his armpit and the temperature in his hands was like 20 degrees higher immediately after the surgery. Blue Cross paid for all of it, too.
    Holy cow, he must have had it pretty bad! For my son it's not near so debilitating to require surgery.

    I'm glad your son found a solution!

    Karen

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Well, it was affecting his cycling; at the time he was racing. Training below 55 degrees was painful and even if he went to brush the snow off of his car in the morning, he was in pain. It was getting worse and worse, and he is a real outdoors person, not just cycling. He has mostly lived in warm climates since he graduated high school, but I think he still has it in his feet. He could get another surgery for that, but i don't think the military would pay for it!

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Looking at all the love there that's sleeping
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    I've never been diagnosed by a doctor, but I wouldn't be surprised if I had it. My fingers frequently go white when it gets cold - like in that picture on the NIH site. Grocery stores are killer for me. I hate getting frozen foods - even in the summer!
    If I have to wait for my DH to pick me up at the metro station in cool weather (not even cold), I end up cranking the heat and/or sitting on my hands for the ride home. If I wait for a bus in the cold weather, my hands are useless lumps of ice - even with ski gloves on. Sticking my hands in warm water is torture (throbbing, tingling, pain), but at least it gets the blood back to 'em.
    When riding in cold weather....my hands turn to ice blocks, are incredibly painful, and then - poof! - I hit this threshold where they are fine.
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  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Jeez, surgery to combat Reynauld's...not sure I'll go that far.

    I work in a building where there is a problem of uneven temperatures in different offices. My boss who is 2.5 times bigger than I and has his office next to my dept., likes to lower the heat.

    2 months ago, that resulted in me with a fever. My hands were ice cold. Temperature probably was hovering 10 degrees above freezing, but it was cold air current flowing into our dept.

    I literally had to take a sick day off. Then later another employee and I covered up the ventilation unit with cardboard after I informed by boss.

    I hope this never happens again...but we haven't gotten into deep winter yet..not that it gets really cold on the bottom of the mountains in Vancouver.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    West Milwaukee
    Posts
    281
    I also have it, but mine is secondary to another condition. The cold for me isn't the most painful part ... that comes when my feet start warming up and my toes really start to throb.

    I have found that since I've been biking more, and generally staying more active, my feet have done much better. I guess that regular exercise helps the circulation to the extremities and makes for less occurrences, or at least less painful ones for me.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    436
    My dad has it - he takes a tablet every day and it keeps it completely under control. He plays golf every day even in freezing temps with no probs.

    Hope you get a solution.
    If it's not one thing it's another

 

 

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