Stephen Lewis
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 207
- Location
- Victoria BC Canada
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Hypocrites, liars, donald trump (no capitals for emphasis)
In my experience and some research the messages being sent through our nervous system is a warning of something wrong and in my case this seems to be something wrong with the small capillaries. Eventually if the circulation does not improve the nerve endings start to stop responding and this results in numbness and worse conditions. In my case, even with diabetes, I have very little numbness but a very heightened touch/pain sensitivity to slight knocks and pressure. I would pass the pin prick test with great pain. Sometimes we just need to give the symptom information in the right way to enable the correct tests to be done or to get a referral to a specialist. Hope this helps Annb.I had this unpleasant tingling in one foot many years ago but couldn't get anyone interested, then after a couple of years it developed in the second foot but again doctors and nurses seemed uninterested and couldn't offer any ideas about what was causing it. Even a podiatrist had no idea what the problem could be. Eventually I looked at all the other undiagnosed symptoms and asked my GP "is this diabetes?" The answer was definitely "yes". The tingling has never gone away despite getting my blood sugar down to reasonable levels although doppler tests and pin prick test, which are done fairly regularly now, show that the circulation is still OK.
Recently I have developed, not just tingling, but hands losing all sensation until I massage them back to life. I tried to find out if this was something similar to the feet but was told that I have carpal tunnel syndrome. Actually, I know that I do, but that is due to the extreme pain in my hand joints and I still suspect that the lifeless hands is something to do with diabetes.
Does anyone else have this problem?