Numbness In Hand; Causes And When To See A Doctor
Posted by: tosin on October 22, 2013
Numbness in one or both hands describes a loss of sensation or feeling in your hand or fingers. Often, numbness in hand may be accompanied by other changes, such as a pins-and-needles sensation, burning or tingling. The arm, hand or fingers may feel clumsy or weak.
Numbness can occur along a single nerve, or it may occur in both hands in a symmetrical pattern.
CAUSES:
Numbness in a hand is usually caused by damage, irritation or compression of one of the nerves or a branch of one of the nerves in your arm and wrist.
Diseases affecting the peripheral nerves, such as diabetes, also can cause numbness, although this is often preceded by similar symptoms in your feet.
Rarely, numbness can be caused by problems in your brain or spinal cord, although this is usually accompanied by weakness or loss of function in your arm or hand. Fortunately, numbness by itself is only rarely associated with potentially life-threatening disorders, such as strokes or tumors.
Your doctor will need detailed information about your symptoms to diagnose the cause of your numbness. A variety of tests may be needed to confirm the cause before appropriate treatment can begin.
Possible causes of numbness in one or both of your hands include:
Alcoholism
Amyloidosis (when substances called amyloid proteins build up in your organs)
Brachial plexus injury (an injury to the network of nerves that conducts signals from the spine to the shoulder, arm and hand)
Carpal tunnel syndrome
Cervical spondylosis (age-related wear and tear affecting the disks in your neck)
Ganglion cysts (noncancerous fluid-filled lumps that most commonly develop along the tendons or joints of your wrists or hands)
Guillain-Barre syndrome (an uncommon disorder in which your body’s immune system attacks your nerves)
HIV/AIDS
Lyme disease (a tick-borne illness)
Multiple sclerosis
Paraneoplastic syndromes of the nervous system (a group of rare disorders that develop in some people with cancer)
Peripheral neuropathy (nerve damage that often causes numbness and pain in your hands and feet)
Raynaud’s disease (a condition that causes some areas of your body to feel numb and cool in response to cold temperatures or stress)
Side effects of chemotherapy drugs
Sjogren’s syndrome (an autoimmune disease that causes dry eyes and dry mouth)
Spinal cord injury
Stroke
Syphilis
Syringomyelia (the development of a fluid-filled cyst, or syrinx, within your spinal cord)
Type 2 diabetes
Ulnar nerve compression
Vasculitis (an inflammation of your blood vessels)
Vitamin B-12 deficiency
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