Symptoms of poor foot circulation?

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Signs of poor circulation in feet include changes in skin color and texture, hair loss, rashes, foot sores, swelling, weak pulse, and sudden temperature changes. Peripheral vascular disease can cause dangerously poor circulation, leading to foot sores or ulcers that don’t heal. Cold feet and weak pulses are also symptoms.

Signs and symptoms of poor circulation in the feet include changes in skin color and texture; hair loss or changes in the distribution of hair on the foot; the presence of rashes, foot sores, or swelling; and a weak pulse. Claudication, which is a dull, cramping pain that occurs in the calf after walking foot numbness; the presence of a vein pattern or enlargement; and sudden changes in temperature are also signs and symptoms of circulation problems. A sign of a medical condition is what can be seen, heard, felt, smelled, or measured not only by the patient, but by other people as well. Symptoms, on the other hand, are things that only the patient can experience in their own body and are not seen, heard, felt, smelled, or measured by others, not even healthcare professionals.

Poor circulation in the feet can lead to discoloration of the foot, making the skin appear pale, reddish or bluish, and the texture of a foot may appear shiny, as if it has been polished. The skin may feel abnormally thin when examined, particularly if there is veiny patterning or enlargement. Peripheral vascular disease can quickly lead to dangerously poor circulation, so when your feet are examined by a doctor, a visual inspection of the veins is done. Veins carry blood from the foot to the heart.

Foot sores or ulcers often appear and do not heal properly or at all, particularly when circulation is very poor. Rashes that appear on a foot may cover only a small section or a large area. Another interesting symptom is the onset of pain at rest, but not when standing or walking. If this is experienced, it should be reported to the treating physician, who should also ask the patient about the times cramps or pain in the feet occur.

A drop in temperature leading to cold feet is one of the first signs of poor circulation in the feet. There are a couple of things, however, that need to be kept in mind when considering temperature variations. Sometimes, there is a temperature difference between the two feet, which almost always serves as a sign and symptom of poor circulation. Weak pulses are another sure sign of poor circulation, but they’re almost never checked by laymen. The pulses that can be checked for good circulation in the feet are the posterior tibial pulse, which is felt behind the inner ankle, and the dorsal pulse of the foot, which is lateral to the greater hallucis tendon.




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