Putting your finger on the cause of numbness
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It's common to lose feeling in your fingers or toes in cold weather, but for some people it is a symptom of a potentially serious disease When Debbie, now 60, was a university student in her late teens, her fingers started intermittently turning white and numb. Sometimes it just affected the tips; at others times it was her entire fingers. On occasion they even went blue. |
Triggers and symptoms While Raynaud’s is a little-known disease, it affects nearly one in seven of the UK population. Often very uncomfortable, an attack is caused by a disruption in how the nervous system controls blood vessels, although no one knows why this happens. |
Links to more serious conditions Blood vessels overreacting to cold or stress can cause more concerning conditions. This is known as secondary Raynaud’s and affects about 10% of people with the disease. |
Matilda’s story Matilda is a 62-year-old artist who lives with systemic sclerosis, which means she has to cope with a wide array of debilitating symptoms. She suffers from such severe gastrointestinal problems that she had a stoma put in about five months ago. As a result she follows a semi-liquid diet, which is fortified with a drink she gets on prescription. She can’t eat bread, salads, fibre, cheese or meat. How you can help Raynaud’s on its own is relatively common and mild in terms of symptoms, but it can be linked to rare and serious underlying autoimmune conditions like Matilda’s. This rarity means the medical community lacks sufficient knowledge to help those affected, and that there aren’t enough people for robust scientific studies. |
This feature first appeared in the Feburary 2025 issue of The Lady magazine. |