peripheral neuropathy -causes and results of peripheral neuropathy.
Nobody likes pain. In
fact, we do our best to avoid it peripheralneuropathy. No one likes physical pain. We try to avoid emotional pain in
choosing the right relationships. We generally seek a life without pain…then
you get your wish and realize that you miss it.
That’s exactly how
millions feel who are suffering from peripheral neuropathy. Peripheral
neuropathy is a condition that commonly affects people with diabetes.
It can also be caused
by a result of chemotherapy, alcoholism. Autoimmune disorders and a host of
other conditions that we may not even know about. So why does it happen? That
answer is not so simple.
Neuropathy as a
complication of diabetes is caused by micro vascular disease. That’s the small
vessels that branch off from the main pipeline arteries. The vessel stops
carrying blood, which holds oxygen and nutrients, to the nerves and causes them
to fail.
So how do we correct
this? Not easily. If that’s the reason, sometimes the individual needs a
procedure to restore circulation. Other times, when the main circulation is in
good shape, there may be other modalities.
One therapy is called
MicroVAX, which is a non-invasive treatment that stimulates the micro vascular
circulation to reverse diabetic neuropathy. It is effective based on the cause
of the neuropathy.
Studies have shown it
to be very effective for diabetic patients, but less so for those that have
neuropathy due to other reasons. For conditions other than diabetes, the cause
of neuropathy is not clear.
If we don’t know the
cause, then it’s really hard to find a solution. Sometimes the cause is a
compression of the nerve, sometimes a nutritional deficiency, and sometimes for
a reason that cannot be determined.
So big deal, why this
is so important. Think about how you react when you touch a hot stove. Your
first impulse is to pull back your hand. This is because your brain reacts to
the pain even before you can feel it. And if you had no pain? You would get a
pretty nasty burn.
Now think about your
feet. We wedge them into shoes every day. What if your shoes didn’t fit? The
average person would take them off and figure out why.
If you had no pain, you
would keep walking. What if you had a pebble in your shoes? Again, the pain
would cause you to take care of it. If you were walking barefoot and stepped on
a piece of glass? You see where this is going…
People with diabetes
will not feel these minor injuries and can develop sores, blisters and skin
ulcers. These ulcers can become infected easily, spread to the bone, and cause
major problems.
More than 60% of
amputations not caused by some sort of trauma are due to complications from
diabetes. This is why all people with diabetes should be familiar with
podiatrist.
I routinely tell my
diabetic patients that they should check their feet daily before they go to
sleep and call me if they see anything that wasn’t there the night before.
I tell them that they
call me and it be nothing than let it go and let it develop into a problem. The
research documents that a comprehensive foot care program can reduce the rate
of amputations in people with diabetes by 45%-85%. With those numbers, you
should run carefully to your podiatrist’s office. It’s the first step in peripheral neuropathy keeping you
walking for years to come.
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