Study Finds Raynaud’s Symptoms Can Flare Up in Hot Weather Too …C0NTINUE READING HERE >>>
Raynaud’s phenomenon causes people to feel tingling and numbness in their fingers and toes in particularly cold weather. According to a new study, those symptoms can be troublesome when it’s hot out, too.
Raynaud’s phenomenon, also called Raynaud’s syndrome, is a condition that causes the small blood vessels in the extremities to constrict. The decreased blood flow can cause fingers and toes to change color, go numb, or become painful.
A study published last week in Lancet…
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