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Old 06-09-2018, 08:02 PM
DishRag DishRag is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2018
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 57
5 yr Member
DishRag DishRag is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2018
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 57
5 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by judymoon View Post
I was diagnosed with ideopathic neuropathy 4 years ago. This site has the most valuable information I've found.

I started taking B12, alpha lipioc acid, lecithin, niacin, and B6. The symptoms became more manageable after some time on these supplements.

Looking back I can see that I was having symptoms before I realized something was wrong.The first, that I could no longer tolerate taking a hot bath. My skin would itch so bad and no amount of scratching would relieve it.

Then I bought new work shoes and it felt like there were little stones or something in the right foot near the toes. I even sent them back and got another pair and had the same problem. Then the weird numb feeling in two toes on my right foot.

I finally saw a neurologist who diagnosed me.

It has since gradually spread to both feet and sometimes moves up my ankles. The symptoms come and go and are sometimes barely noticeable. other times they are very bad. I don't know what triggers a bad spell.

I've done a lot of research and there are a few things that can cause neuropathy.

The main one is diabetes. Also alcohol abuse. (However, I was married to a chronic alcoholic, and he doesn't have neuropathy at 68 years of age). Auto-immune disorders can also cause it, thought I don't know how.

That is why I am answering your post. Allergies are concidered an auto-immune disorder, and it sounds like you have quite a few. If your symptoms flare up when your allergies flare up, maybe there is a connection.

I'm just trying to throw some ideas out there. I know this a very frustrating diagnoses. Good luck with your healing process.
Thanks Judy, I have always thought that the drugs taken to combat my allergies were linked to my PN.....I never considered that the allergies themselves could be a culprit.

The ONE thing about "gettin older" that is not a negative is that the immune system retards, slowing down it's reaction to 'intruders'. When I retired in '07 I moved to Tennessee which is one of the highest pollen states. Everything here I found manageable(with topical steroids like Nasonex applied)> I can even cut, tedder and rake hay without much drama.

But, come September....BLACK September, the giant ragweed blooms and I am sunk. So, I leave.....get on my bike and ride West for a month....Pacific coast Highway, Grand Canyon, Moab....etc. Last year we went to Ireland in Sept.......FANTASTIC place!

You have a point, Spring(and it came really early here) brings the pollen levels off the chart. Maybe it was nothing I did, but something my environment did...to me. Much to ponder...THANK YOU!
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