common
Raynaud's phenomenon
Raynaud , also known as Raynaud's phenomenon, is a medical condition in which the spasm of small causes episodes of reduced blood flow to end arterioles. Typically the disease affects the fingers, and, less commonly, the toes, though it rarely also affects the nose, ears, nipples, or lips. The episodes classically result in the affected part turning white and then blue. Often, numbness or pain occurs. As blood flow returns, the area turns red and burns. The episodes typically last minutes but can last several hours. The condition is named after the physician Auguste Gabriel Maurice Raynaud, who first described it in his doctoral thesis in 1862.
Underlined words are explained — tap any of them.
Symptoms — what it feels like
- ·An affected part turning white, then blue, then red, burning
How it's found
- ·Based on the symptoms
Treatment
- ·Avoiding cold, calcium channel , iloprost
Complications
- ·skin sores, gangrene
More in Blood Vessels
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See all of Blood Vessels →Plain-language summary adapted from Wikipedia. Not medical advice.