Can arthritis cause intermittent stumbling?
Can arthritis cause intermittent stumbling?
It is not very specialized for this medical aspect, but arthritis is serious and has a great impact on the body, it has a certain effect on the person's walking, especially knee arthritis, when the moment of pain strikes maybe you will really fall down, some of them on both knees. The so-called intermittent fall is also a medical term for a painful and unavoidable fall due to arthritis that makes walking difficult and accidental. However, by taking care of protection and using medication or Chinese medicine, joint pain and weakness will be reduced. to minimize accidents due to arthritis. There is an old man taught a way to do this: use your hands to cover your knees, forward and reverse rotation each 100 circles, adhere to twice a day, a month you will have significant improvement. I hope it can help friends with arthritis.
My answer like simple and rough, first of all to emphasize the intermittent, that is, at the beginning does not hurt to walk a period of time after the pain, rest and does not hurt to walk a period of time and pain! Arthritis etiology is divided into many kinds of older people are mostly degenerative, rheumatism line caused by young people rheumatism immunity is common, but no matter which is a chronic process of pain for years and years, resting also pain just will be better! So arthritis symptoms to slow walking pain with remembering aggravation as the main symptom, intermittent claudication is mainly used to describe the lower extremity deep vein thrombosis caused by lower extremity ischemic line pain, rest will be ischemic relief, walking ischemic aggravation!
Intermittent claudication is usually caused by problems with blood circulation or lymphatic circulation in the lower limbs, the most typical being Raynaud's disease in Western medicine. The typical symptom is that after walking for some time, the patient will feel pain and weakness in the lower limbs, and must stop for some time before continuing to walk.
Arthritis (which should refer to the lower limbs) also affects movement, although in terms of symptoms, although similar to intermittent claudication, both are accompanied by dyskinesia, pain and discomfort in the lower limbs. But strictly speaking, it is not a disease. The etiology, mechanism, and treatment are all different.
However, it cannot be ruled out that due to long-term arthropathy, or due to improper treatment of arthritic diseases, such as long-term use of hormone therapy, which leads to the obstruction of blood circulation in the lower limbs, which also complicates the emergence of such a disease as intermittent claudication.
In terms of treatment, both TCM and Western medicine have methods. Personally, I prefer Chinese medicine, which is more systematic in terms of cause, mechanism, and treatment plan, and it can be differentiated from person to person and treat according to the evidence. The treatment is timely and the result is more satisfactory.
(I have a video explanation of vasculitis in my public number, interested parties can pay more attention)
Thank you for your invitation! In fact, you were not only arthritis so simple, you have long had intermittent fall, just not too serious or arthritis is more serious or you meet the physician inexperience of your diagnosis is not clear enough, only diagnosed arthritis did not diagnose your intermittent fall and miss the best time for treatment, so resulting in today's intermittent fall is serious, I treatment recommended conservative treatment.
This statement may be debatable in itself, but of course it can be said to be a possibility if allowed! Because it is also possible that it is intermittent falling that causes arthritis, and more likely that some other cause triggers both arthritis and intermittent falling.
More importantly, of course, the crux of the matter is whether it is possible to treat both symptoms at the same time? How should it be treated?
Able to heal.
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) treatment. Because Chinese medicine is evidence-based, based on one or a group of symptoms, and thus the principle of dialectics, deduce the cause of the disease and give a treatment plan, Chinese medicine is even more cause-specific treatment.
With regard to the two symptoms mentioned in this question, it is still not possible to solve the problem with one solution (or possibly with the same solution) because the patient's age, gender, geographic location, constitution, age of illness, psychology, the five movements and six qi of the year, and concurrent evidence are all factors that the practitioner needs to consider!
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