A doctor is warning anyone whose hands and feet change colour in the cold may have a serious health condition. There are a ...
A 25-year-old woman suffers from yellow feet with extreme pain due to lack of blood circulation because of Raynaud's syndrome, which narrows blood vessels eventually stopping circulation. According to ...
The symptoms of this disease - sometimes called a syndrome - which causes ... the hands often affect the feet. While medication is occasionally given to Raynaud’s patients, such as the blood ...
Even though treatment has helped, her feet won’t let her forget that she has lupus. Every day, they swell and ache due to arthritis and turn blue from sensitivity to cold—a marker of a vascular ...
Raynaud's disease, Doctor O'Donovan explained, happens when smaller arteries narrow in response to cold weather or stress, limiting blood flow to certain areas. As a result, sections of your fingers ...
Raynaud's phenomenon is a condition in which some areas of the body ... The fingers and hands (or, more rarely, the feet, nose, or ears) may turn pale, white, and later blue and feel cold to the touch ...
the blood vessels in our hands and feet narrow. This reduces blood flow to the extremities of our body and helps keep our vital organs warm. But in someone with Raynaud’s, the blood vessels are ...
Doctor O'Donovan advised: "You should see your doctor if you have symptoms of Raynaud's that are very bad or getting worse, ...
It turned out to be secondary Raynaud's disease - a condition that affected extremities such as the hands or feet during cold temperatures. Mr Holt-Wilson has found ways to cope with his ...
He said: "In Raynaud’s disease the smaller arteries that supply ... might notice other changes in the sensation of your hands or feet so things like a numb, prickly feeling or stinging pain.