I am a 14 year old female with a very big worry. My grandmother had five toes removed from her feet because of gangrene and lack of blood curculation. These incident are quite common amongst my family history. I am worried I may be on the same path. My feet are always very cold and have a blueish tinge, they have very slight, blunt sensation and take months to heal from the smallest cut. They often have sevee pain rising to midway up my leg which feels as though there is a blockage allowing pressure to biuld up which is causing pain. It's like a suffocating pain but in my feet and lower leg. I have ben tested for diabetes and don't have it. I am not overweight. I realised this problem when I was 10 but i have an incling it's been there for years. It has taken a turn for the wose recently. I am very worried as I can't afford a doctor and have no access to free health care. My parents don't believe in doctors and I live in rural Australia and can not gain access to any by myself so i must know. What is wrong with me? Am I following in the footsteps of my relatives? How can I prevent, treat, minimise such problems? I am very worried please help, perhaps if i can get some information my parents might realise that my problem is serious and lend me some money or if it isn't i can finally be at ease. Please hurry.
Episodic vasospasm (constriction of small arteries) of the digits. It is characterized by digital blanching, cyanosis(blue), a feeling of numbness or dulled sensory response and rubor (red) after cold exposure and rewarming. It can also be induced by anxiety or stress. This condition is primarily confined to the fingers and toes but can affect areas of the body such as your nose, cheeks, ears and even tongue. Blanching represents the ischemic (lack of adequate blood flow) phase of the phenomenon, caused by digital artery vasospasm. Cyanosis results from deoxygenated blood in capillaries and venules (small veins). Upon rewarming and resolution of the digital vasospasm, a hyperemic phase ensues, causing the digits to appear red. Raynaud's can be a primary or secondary disorder.
Primary Raynaud's phenomenon is also called Raynaud's disease. Criteria for Raynaud's disease include episodic digital ischemia (sequence of color changes in the skin in response to cold or stress), a numb, prickly feeling or stinging pain upon warming or relief of stress, absence of arterial occlusion, bilateral distribution, absence of symptoms or signs of other diseases that also cause Raynaud's phenomenon, and duration of symptoms for 2 years or longer. Most people with Raynaud's disease develop symptoms before they reach 40 years of age. It can occur in young children. Raynaud's disease affects women three to five times more frequently than men. The prevalence is lower in warm climates than in cold climates.
An important point is to differentiate between Raynaud's and acrocyanosis, a condition in which there is persistent bluish discoloration of the hands or feet. Like Raynaud's phenomenon, cyanotic discoloration intensifies during cold exposure, and rubor may appear with rewarming. Acrocyanosis affects both men and women, and the age at onset is usually between 20 and 45 years. The prognosis of patients with idiopathic acrocyanosis is good, and loss of digital tissue is uncommon. Patients should avoid cold exposure and dress warmly. Pharmacologic intervention usually is not necessary. Alpha-adrenergic blocking agents and calcium channel blockers may be effective in some patients with acrocyanosis.from:http://mooie-avondjurken.expertpagina.nl/
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