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- $Unique_ID{BRK01408}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Burning Pain in the Foot and Toes After a Car Accident}
- $Subject{pain causalgia accidents nervous system burning nerve sciatic median
- brachial reflex sympathetic dystrophy pains accident nerves skin muscles
- tendons muscle tendon}
- $Volume{O-1, F-1}
- $Log{}
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- Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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- Burning Pain in the Foot and Toes After a Car Accident
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- QUESTION: I am very troubled by a continuing burning pain in my foot and toes
- some five months after a car accident. My doctor is of little help, saying it
- is nothing, and will all go away soon. Can you tell me what this pain is, and
- where it is coming from. I don't think it is imaginary.
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- ANSWER: Many patients experience vague complaints of pain after a trauma or
- accident such as a fall, car accident, gunshot or knife wound. Instead of
- dismissing their outcries as coming from people with a "low pain threshold"
- or as imaginary complaints, these patients deserve a detailed session to
- obtain a detailed history of the circumstances and a most careful examination.
- Here are some possible diagnoses.
- "Causalgia" is defined as a sustained burning pain after a traumatic
- injury to a nerve. The pain appears one to two weeks later, and usually
- affects the sciatic nerve, median, or brachial. It is usually constant and
- intense and spreads from the injured nerve to other portions of the limb.
- Numbness and motor dysfunction are not uncommon. Difficult to treat, this
- condition can last anywhere from six months to a year.
- Another kind of pain caused by trauma (or any type of injury) to the bone
- or soft tissue is called reflex sympathetic dystrophy. Remember, not caused
- by a nerve injury, it affects the skin, muscles, tendons, and blood vessels.
- What these two pain syndromes have in common, though, are some shared
- symptoms: an unpleasant burning sensation, a disagreeable sensitivity to
- stimulation, and a painful overreaction to stimuli followed by
- aftersensations. But this is the more treatable of the two, and your
- physician might begin by blocking the sympathetic nerve and starting you on an
- exercise regimen coupled with lukewarm baths to bring the limb back to normal.
- You have the right to more consideration of your complaint than you
- indicate in your letter. It may well be time to consider consulting another
- physician.
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- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
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