It is strange that body parts fall asleep. You stand up from your seat or stand Stand feels uncomfortable scratchy from one foot, one foot, one hand or one arm. Then you wake up again at night, and you can not move your legs, feet, hands or arms. When your body part "wakes up" you will feel a strange tingling sensation. What makes this stabbing feeling. (How to work 1) This tingling sensation is caused by paresthesia. Paresthesia is an individual's skin tremor, itching, tingling, stinging or burning skin without significant long-range physical influences.
Many people infected with HSV will recur within one year after infection. Prodromal symptoms precede the onset of the lesion. Symptoms of prodromal symptoms include tingling (sensory abnormalities) that innervate the skin, itching, and lumbosacral nerve. The precursor may occur in a short period of time, such as several days or several hours before the onset of the lesion. Initiating antiviral therapy while experiencing prodromal symptoms can reduce the appearance and duration of a particular person's lesion. At the time of relapse, the number of lesions occurring is reduced compared to the lesion that occurs during the primary infection, and there is a possibility that pain and cure may occur quickly (in the absence of antiviral therapy within 5 to 10 days). Subsequent outbreaks are often periodic or sporadic and occur on average 4 to 5 times a year without antiviral therapy.
Symptoms usually occur within 30 minutes after ingestion, but can be delayed up to 4 hours; however, if the dose is fatal, symptoms usually appear within 17 minutes after ingestion. Quadriplegic paralysis, excessive saliva, perspiration, headache, weakness, malaise, coordination, trembling, convulsion, cyanosis, aphasia, dysphagia, seizures occur after lips and tongue abnormalities. Gastrointestinal symptoms are usually severe including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain, and death usually follows secondary respiratory failure. Symptoms such as increased respiratory distress, speech disorder, dyspnea, purpura, pupil dilation, hypotension, etc. are seen. Convulsions, convulsions, psychiatric disorders and increases in arrhythmias may occur. However, some victims are in coma
• Postoperative patients often have complications including weakness, paresthesia, paralysis, depression, and memory loss. These symptoms are due to untreated B12 deficiency, which is exacerbated by exposure to nitrous oxide during surgery and / or increased metabolic demand after surgery and tissue repair. • How many dialysis patients have B12 deficiency? Does administration of hydroxocobalamin or mevalamine (IM or IV) reduce the elevated levels of MMA and Hcy in these patients and help in treating uremic neuropathy? Since dialysis patients are at high risk of thrombosis, initial treatment of this group may be preventable and treatable.