I get that in the evenings too or when I hold a cold glass.   Acetaminophen 
seems to help as does hot water.  has anyone ever tried  cannabis at these 
times ?  that sure kills my spasms dead.
azdave
 
 
 
In a message dated 1/2/2011 9:20:29 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
Hi  Greg, 
The  sensation you describe, that tingling, burning cold, emersed in 
icewater  feeling, is exactly how my arms, hands, legs, feet, and rear end feel 
24/7,  and it's much worse in my left hand and left foot. There is absolutely 
no  relief whatever I do and like you, it is much worse during the colder 
winter  months. I have tried pain meds, anti-seizure meds, anti-depression 
meds, meds  for neuropathy (Lyrica and Neurontin), biofeedback, electrical 
stimulation,  acupuncture, hypnosis, and nerve blocks, all in vain. I dearly 
hope that you  and anyone else experiencing these sensations finds the relief 
that has eluded  me. 
Steve  - C4, 22 years 
 
 
From: greg  [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, January 02, 2011 11:05  AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [QUAD-L] Cold to the  Bone

 
I just don't know  how you north and east guys can do it, living in such 
cold  places.
 
Down in the Phx  area we only get a few drops into freezing temps and it 
has been  miserable.
 
I had my house at  78, plus a space heater blasting me, while drinking hot 
drinks all day, and I  just could not get warm.
 
(Though I think  it's better not to use the space heater because once I 
move away from the  blowing hot air, I get even colder.)
 
Once I get cold I  tighten up into 1 clinched muscle and whenever I stretch 
out my fingers it  causes excess tingling up my forearms.
 
It's that tingling  that is a burning, cold, ice-water, feeling. Northing I 
can do to get it to go  away until I sleep for the night.
 
I always have that  tingling, but after stretching it get crazy bad.
 
If I relax and  lift my shirts a bit, I can feel the heat coming off my 
body, but I still am  shaking.
 
I know by evening  time my shoulders are sore and that can make me feel 
cold too, so when it's  cold out it multiplies things.
 
Not being able to  sit and relax my muscles in the sun is a big part of the 
problem, I usually  spend hours outside.
 
Good luck to you  all who are freezing too!
 

 
Greg


Reply via email to