Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Alzheimer’s disease could be diagnosed years before symptoms become devastating – as researchers hail TWO new breakthroughs in blood tests and brain scans

    Dates can lower cholesterol and improve digestion… but experts warn overindulging on the treacle-tasting fruit could have serious consequences

    FDA urgently recalls ice pops over undeclared ingredients linked to behavioral issues and cancer risk

    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    HealthOptiBodyHealthOptiBody
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Healthy News

      In a Vaccine-Skeptical California County, a Potential Playbook To Contain Measles

      Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’

      Nurse Convicted in Patient’s Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into a Cautionary Tale

      Montana Hurries To Adopt Trump’s Medicaid Work Rules Amid Budget Woes

      Readers Address Drugged Driving, Suicide Prevention, Worker Shortages

    • Healthy Food
    • Lifestyle
    • Disease
    • Nutrition
    • healthy living
    HealthOptiBodyHealthOptiBody
    Home»Hot»Why NEVER to ignore the sudden sensation of hot, burning feet – and how to finally ease the agony for good: DR MARTIN SCURR
    Hot

    Why NEVER to ignore the sudden sensation of hot, burning feet – and how to finally ease the agony for good: DR MARTIN SCURR

    Hill CastleBy Hill CastleNo Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    My husband’s feet feel as if they’re burning when he walks. The GP said it’s burning feet syndrome and referred him to a neurologist but there’s a several months’ wait. He was prescribed gabapentin, but it didn’t help.

    Hazel Hanley, Bexhill

    Dr Martin Scurr replies: Burning feet syndrome – an intensely hot sensation in the soles caused by activity and improving when you rest – is typically a sign of some kind of nerve malfunction. The most common cause is peripheral neuropathy – damage to nerves in the limbs; other symptoms often include tingling, numbness or pain. These symptoms usually start in the hands or feet.

    Peripheral neuropathy can be the result of diabetes, excessive alcohol intake or vitamin B12 deficiency (which becomes more common with age, as the stomach produces less acid, needed to help the body absorb the vitamin, important for nerve health, from food).

    However, in some cases the cause is not clear. The condition is diagnosed by a neurologist using a nerve conduction study, where small electric currents are administered to the skin to judge how well the signals are being passed along the nerves. This would be followed by investigations to find the cause of the nerve damage.

    Anticonvulsant drugs such as gabapentin – which your husband was prescribed – work by calming abnormal signals in the nerves. This hasn’t worked in his case, but it can take weeks to do so, and doses may need to be raised slowly – if this fails, different drugs, such as antidepressants at a low dose, could help.

    Burning feet syndrome is typically a sign of some kind of nerve malfunction. The most common cause is peripheral neuropathy

    Burning feet syndrome is typically a sign of some kind of nerve malfunction. The most common cause is peripheral neuropathy

    Anticonvulsant drugs such as gabapentin work by calming abnormal signals in the nerves, but it can take weeks to work

    Anticonvulsant drugs such as gabapentin work by calming abnormal signals in the nerves, but it can take weeks to work

    Another potential but much more rare cause of burning feet is erythromelalgia, a condition linked to blood cell disorders.

    A classic sign of this is the symptoms easing when you rest with the feet elevated or cool them in water. Whilst waiting for his neurology appointment, I’d suggest your husband ask his GP for a blood test to check his blood count and blood film picture (where a thin film of blood is put on a glass slide and examined under a microscope).

    I’m an 81-year-old woman in good health but, as far as I can remember, I’ve had a high heart rate (70 beats per minute). Recently, I have been feeling constantly tired, sleeping more than I’ve been awake. Also my heart rate has been consistently over 100 and up to 125. I always seem to feel light-headed and unwell. An ECG and blood tests were normal. I am just fed up with feeling unwell all the time.

    Dot Pardy, Poole, Dorset

    Dr Martin Scurr replies: Even though your tests were normal, in my view your ongoing symptoms suggest you need more investigation. While you wait to see your GP again, I’d suggest weighing yourself at the same time of day once a week and taking your temperature twice daily – and recording your results.

    These are useful details that will give your doctor some information upon which to base further investigations. Your symptoms could indicate a thyroid issue or an infection – and it is possible that the blood tests you had didn’t check key markers of these.

    Fatigue is potentially a sign of a ‘silent’ urinary infection, so, as well as blood tests, I would advise a urine test. Plus, of course, a physical examination, which must include your heart and abdomen. GPs have had many years of training in how to do this – it is not something that can be delegated to a nurse or medical assistant.

    You mention in your longer letter having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, an umbrella term for chronic lung disease. Given this, I would also suggest you have a chest X-ray. Please do let me know how you get on.

    In my view… The antibiotics that can harm gut health

    Not so long ago, we would have regarded microbes in the gut as deeply worrying, but we now know the community of bacteria, fungi and viruses there – the gut microbiome – plays a key role in our wellbeing.

    Alarmingly, even a single course of antibiotics can damage the gut microbiome.

    A study, published in Nature Medicine involving 15,000 adults, has found that clindamycin, ciprofloxacin and flucloxacillin may be the most disruptive – penicillin V (a specific type), amoxicillin and nitrofurantoin the least.

    To my mind, this confirms we GPs should avoid handing out broad-spectrum antibiotics – only after samples have been analysed in the lab, and the culprit organism identified, should we prescribe an antibiotic for that particular bacteria.

    Of course, for acute emergency care in hospitals, antibiotics may have to be administered before there’s time for a microbiology report. Meanwhile, if you need antibiotics, once you’ve finished the whole course, add probiotics to your diet. Try live yoghurt, kombucha or kefir every day for a week or two.

    Previous ArticleDaisy brand deli meat tests positive for deadly bacteria in outbreak that has sickened three
    Next Article Colorado resident dies of deadly rat virus – but wasn’t on the notorious cruise ship where outbreak began
    Hill Castle
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Alzheimer’s disease could be diagnosed years before symptoms become devastating – as researchers hail TWO new breakthroughs in blood tests and brain scans

    Dates can lower cholesterol and improve digestion… but experts warn overindulging on the treacle-tasting fruit could have serious consequences

    FDA urgently recalls ice pops over undeclared ingredients linked to behavioral issues and cancer risk

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Healthy News

    One Major Effect Coffee Has on Your Body, New Study Says

    By Hill Castle0 Healthy News

    To understand the new smart monitors and other pro devices of tech health, we should…

    Do Antacids Affect Kidneys, and Also Lead to Osteoporosis?

    Spine Devices Market to Surpass US$ 17 Bn as Demand Rises

    5 Best Probiotic Supplements for Gut Health in 2021

    Our Picks

    Alzheimer’s disease could be diagnosed years before symptoms become devastating – as researchers hail TWO new breakthroughs in blood tests and brain scans

    Dates can lower cholesterol and improve digestion… but experts warn overindulging on the treacle-tasting fruit could have serious consequences

    FDA urgently recalls ice pops over undeclared ingredients linked to behavioral issues and cancer risk

    Health chiefs tell diners to check restaurant hygiene ratings as salmonella cases reach decade high

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Demo
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    • Home
    • Healthy News
    • Healthy lifestyle
    • Disease
    © 2026 DailyHealthybox. Designed by HealthOptiBody.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.