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-   -   walking on pins but only for a few secs? (https://www.neurotalk.org/peripheral-neuropathy/222406-walking-pins-secs.html)

skboren 07-02-2015 09:15 AM

walking on pins but only for a few secs?
 
I read a lot of posts where people say it feels like they are walking on sharp pebbles or things like that. What if it feels like walking on sharp stuff ONLY when you first start walking, for a few seconds, and after that the pain goes away and walking is just fine? Is that a normal experience others have? It feels like a circulatory problem more than a nerve problem since it goes away once the blood gets flowing, but I can't tell. Mind you, blood pools in my feet especially in the mornings whenever I'm standing or sitting with feet on the ground, and not walking around. I don't know what, if anything, that has to do with my PN.

Thanks!
Shauna

janieg 07-02-2015 11:59 AM

Sorry if you've covered this alredy, but have you had a full vascular work-up? When my problems first started, my PCP wanted me to have that done to rule vascular issues out.

I can't related to your scenario with your feet. Mine tingle and/or burn all the time, but they're not worse when I initially start walking around.

KnowNothingJon 07-02-2015 12:21 PM

I wish I could count on one way things go overall. I have more trouble walking sometimes than others and some days my feet have more sensation than others.

I always have a good 15-20 minutes of extra buzzing after a substantial walk (around a mile). I used to wait a few minutes before driving, however I have become accustomed to the sensation.

My muscles spasming, fasticulating, tremors and so on have become as dibilitating as the burning, numbness and shooting star pain has become.

Yea, after some Bambi steps I can develop a rhythm that appears to hold some of these issues at bay, though having to slow down, speed up or when I stop it all comes to let me know it is still present.

Mrs. D has posted a useful guide to nerves and how they function in abother thread that explains this process quite well. I'll edit the link in if/when I find it.

Best of luck finding some comfort and answers.
Jon

KnowNothingJon 07-02-2015 12:23 PM

http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread216128.html

Here is said thread.

Susanne C. 07-02-2015 12:27 PM

I definitely experience more discomfort when I first start walking. Once I am going I actually feel better. Sometimes I pay for a long walk later but so far it is still worth it.

mrsD 07-02-2015 12:43 PM

Thank you, Jon.

Here is a more comprehensive link:
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread194446.html

skboren 07-02-2015 05:58 PM

janieg, thank you - I'll ask my doctor next time I'm in, to order a full vascular workup. Thanks, also, KnowNothingJon and MrsD for the links; that is very interesting. Susanne, thanks for sharing.

It feels like this has progressed so very rapidly. I am really scared. It went from just a few splinter-like finger pains in March, to tingling in April, to loss of sensation in hands and feet in May, to sunburn-like pain on arms and face, plus exaggerated cold feeling in feet in June. Now I have spiderweb-like feelings up and down my arms. I am so desperate to figure out the cause. But the blood has been pooling in my feet and hurting with the first few steps for longer than any of the neuropathy, about 18 months.

skboren 07-02-2015 06:00 PM

Also, the loss of sensation is in my elbows now. It's so scary how fast it's happening, and I can't figure out why.

Healthgirl 07-03-2015 08:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by skboren (Post 1152267)
I read a lot of posts where people say it feels like they are walking on sharp pebbles or things like that. What if it feels like walking on sharp stuff ONLY when you first start walking, for a few seconds, and after that the pain goes away and walking is just fine? Is that a normal experience others have? It feels like a circulatory problem more than a nerve problem since it goes away once the blood gets flowing, but I can't tell. Mind you, blood pools in my feet especially in the mornings whenever I'm standing or sitting with feet on the ground, and not walking around. I don't know what, if anything, that has to do with my PN.

Thanks!
Shauna

That is exactly how mine started. I never told any doctors because I assumed that it was circulatory and just lived with it. Now years later it turns out that it was the beginning of neuropathy. I guess the autonomic part of my neuropathy is what compromises my circulation.

mrsD 07-03-2015 09:44 AM

When I was around 30 (long before my son was born) I stood for long hours in my job. My feet started hurting like you describe in the morning when I first got up. They would settle for the rest of the day. Then my hands started going numb on the steering wheel of my car. My hands worsened horrifically during my pregnancy and that was my EMG time with a rehab doctor that I was referred to by my OB.

Things got much better after I delivered, but I still had some foot and hand issues. I wore the wrist splints from the rehab doctor every night. But I could once again do most things except for hand work (crochet, sewing). So I avoided the suggested surgery for carpal tunnel.

It wasn't until I received my hypothyroid diagnosis in my early 40's that I realized this was all thyroid related. On the medication (levothyroxine), both feet and hands improved dramatically. My feet had grown numb by then, and so woke up and tingled/burned for almost a year and finally settled down.


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