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Old 01-31-2017, 06:26 PM
JoannaP79 JoannaP79 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: South England
Posts: 246
8 yr Member
JoannaP79 JoannaP79 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: South England
Posts: 246
8 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MAT52 View Post
Thanks this is very reassuring. I do have terrible pain in my legs and arms during the night or while resting. It's throbbing and very deep in my calves, shins, knees and feet and is rather different to the SFN burning pain I suffered from for a few years. But the worst of this pain was in my soles so it makes some sense that this is now manifesting as shine.

I fret because my mum died prematurely from severe Atherosclerosis and I have the early clinical signs of this too - hence my question. I also have unexplained weakness in my arms and hands while resting. But I know I have sustained damage in my feet from the SFN so this is hopefully the culprit for the shininess and Raynauds attacks.

I'm also being checked for possibly Scleroderma and Vasculitus so these are possible culprits for my leg and arm pain too. My EMG and NCS were normal a few months ago so I was wondering if all this could relate to poor circulation caused by diseased arteries. I will see a podiatrist in a few weeks and he says he can tell if this is the case. My feet are fairly numb these days as a result of the SFN.
I'm sure there must be loads of overlap. I have shiny feet and sometimes hands. It's in the front of my feet. For me I'm sure that's the sfn damage to my skin making it thinner, more translucent and therefore shinier. Thin damaged skin (which sfn will cause) is going to look shiny in places if it's bad enough.
My feet feel like ice blocks to touch but burn sensation wise.
I have this weakness severely. I know this symptom you describe. Sometimes so bad it takes everything I have not to lie down all day. My legs are real bad. Autoimmune action is known to cause horrendous fatigue. If it feels like more than that to you - mine certainly is more than this - then it could be lots of other things. Nerve damage at a different level to sfn, myositis, or mitochondrial disorders are key possible culprits. It could also be neither. My research and discussions with neuro keep coming back to these 3 possibilities.
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