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ValueRays® USB Hand Warmers - The Healthy Way to Use the Computer!

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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

My Hands Are Always COLD!


Sitting at the computer and trying to use the computer mouse and keyboard with cold, frozen fingers and hands is painful. I've tried running my cold hands under hot water, and as soon as I start working again, the cold hands return. I tried wearing a long sleeve cashmere sweater and pulling the sleeves over my hand, and the sleeves gradually creep up to expose my hand. I even tried fingerless gloves, but I lost touch, and the computer mouse wouldn't work properly. Seems like I've tried everything to keep my hands warm when using the computer, and the only thing that actually works is to stop using the computer, and sometimes (most of the time) that's not an option.

Recently, a friend introduced me to USB hand warmers. These are heated computer gadgets designed specifically for people who have cold hands when using the computer. The heated gadgets are made with a carbon fiber heating element making them produce infrared heat when plugged into the USB port of the computer. What a novel, innovative idea and cold hand problem solver!

The USB hand warmers include a heated computer mouse, a heated mouse pad, a heated keyboard pad and a heated mouse hand warmer blanket pouch. They are remarkable. Not only do they provide a cost-effective, energy-efficient source of warmth, they provide deep healing therapeutic infrared heat. Studies show 20-30 minutes of infrared heat daily can help certain hand conditions like poor circulation, arthritis pain and cold hand pain. The infrared heated hand warmers are plug and play. No additional software is needed to add warmth to a cold office or work area. It sure sounds better than cranking up the thermostat on a cold winter's night.

If your hands get cold when using the computer, and your fingers get so numb it's difficult to type, search Google for "infrared heated USB hand warmers." Learn about the benefits of using infrared heat. The warm computer mouse provides soothing relief to stressed and strained muscles. Infrared heat relieves tension, and the warm keyboard pad is designed with proper ergonomic support for typing.

There are a variety of USB hand warmer options. Select the best option to solve your cold hand problem. It's easy to use the computer when your work area is comfortable and warm.

Anna Miller
ValueRays® USB Infrared Heaters & Hand Warmers
http://IGMproducts.com
http://www.Warm-Mouse-Heated-Keyboard.com


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Monday, August 31, 2009

ValueRays® Products - A Review by Alaskan Apple Users Group

ValueRays.com partnered with the Alaskan Apple Users Group (AAUG) to review the ValueRays® USB Infrared Heated Hand Warmers. The review written in depth by Carlene Brown details the usefulness and functionality of each of the ValueRays® USB hand warmers. The AAUG is a professional organization of Apple users based in Alaska. For more information about the AAUG or to join their group, please contact AAUG.




By Carlene Brown, AAUG Member

When I first saw the ValueRays® heated accessories I immediately wanted to try them. I have arthritis in my wrists and hands extending to the tips of my fingers.,. My hands are often swollen, stiff and painful and at other times ice cold. These conditions can make working on the computer a torturous ordeal. I was skeptical about the effectiveness of these products and really wasn’t expecting much. I am happy to report my skepticism was totally misplaced.

These USB hand warmers are infrared heated and provide ‘infrared heat” therapy for computer users with hand pain and cold hands. I did a little research and discovered that there is ongoing medical research that support the healing & therapeutic benefits of infrared heat therapy. Benefits include increased circulation and oxygen supply to damaged tissues, decreased joint stiffness, increased blood flow, help to relieve pain and aid healing. Infrared heat has been proven to be beneficial to people who suffer with wrist and hand injuries and problems such as arthritis, carpal tunnel syndrome, tendonitis and Raynaud’s Syndrome.

ValueRays® Warm Mouse, Warm Keyboard Pad, Mouse Hand Warmer and Warm Mouse Padare all infrared heated. The low 5v heating element is safe for people and computers. The USB 5v infrared heating element produces temperatures ranging from 99 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit, comfortably warm but not hot enough to burn.

All of the products are plug and play and require no drivers or software installation.



VALUERAYS®
WARM MOUSE I

The ValueRays® Warm Mouse I is a two button mouse with a scroll wheel. It has a smooth metallic finish and an on/of button to shut off the heat supply when it is not needed.

To get started you simply plug the USB cord into a USB port, I was not able to use the USB ports on my Apple keyboard because the Warm Mouse uses too much power for that hub, Turn the heated mouse “on” by pressing the control switch located on the USB cord. Quickly the mouse warms and begins to generate heat. It is recommended that you turn the mouse “off” when not in use. Turning the switch “off” only shuts off the heat supply, you are still able to use the mouse which makes it very convenient at the times when you don’t need the heat.

I have used a one button Apple mouse since the beginning of time and thought I would have trouble adapting to this two button scroll mouse. Not true, it is so very comfortable and easy to use that I was off and surfing immediately. The warmth is very soothing to the hand, I didn’t want to remove my hand from the warm mouse, and the shape fits my hand comfortably. The ergonomic shape also makes the scroll wheel easy to use.



VALUERAYS®
WARM KEYBOARD PAD

The ValueRays® Warm Keyboard Pad connects to your computer using a USB port. The wrist pad is made of a soft foam sponge and covered with a hand-washable black nylon sport fabric that has a zipper on one side to make it easy to remove for washing. The infrared heating element is inside and sits on top of the foam pad. It is enclosed in fabric and attached to the USB cord. The heating element can be placed in the center or moved to either end of the keyboard pad depending on where it is most helpful or convenient for the user. The keyboard pad has a connector plug allowing it to be disconnected from the USB cord and used without the heat. The bottom has a non-slip surface.

I love this Warm Keyboard Pad. I broke my wrist several years ago and, also, have extensive arthritis at the base of both thumbs. My wrists are quite painful especially in damp or cold weather. I have probably tried every type of wrist aid that is made to relieve the pain when using the computer keyboard…most didn’t help at all. When I set up the ValueRays® Warm Keyboard Pad i was so surprised. It warmed up quickly and immediately felt good on my wrists. The more I used it the better my wrists and even my hands felt. The heat penetrates through to the painful areas and warms and soothes them.

The nylon sport fabric cover is not smooth material and it took a little while to get used to the feel of the material on my wrists. Mainly it was irritating to me when using the keyboard pad with the heat turned off.

With the ValueRays® Warm Keyboard Pad connected and turned on I now look forward to typing on the keyboard, even first thing in the morning.



VALUERAYS® USB MOUSE HAND WARMER

Upon opening the ValueRays® USB Mouse Hand Warmer I laughed. I wasn’t quite sure what it was. I had never seen a blanket for your hand. But, that is exactly what it is. Think of those cold winter mornings when you don’t want to get out of bed, and so you snuggle down to keep warm under the soft covers. The USB Mouse Hand Warmer is just that. A cozy, heated, mini-blanket to warm your cold mouse hand.

The USB Mouse Hand Warmer is a pouch made of a double layer of soft fleece and has a non-slip surface on the bottom. It contains an infrared heating element and has a USB plug. It measures 12″ X 12′

The USB Mouse Hand Warmer can be used with a USB connected mouse or a wireless mouse. Simply slip a mouse pad and your mouse into the Mouse Hand Warmer Blanket and plug it into a USB port. In a few minutes it will be toasty warm. The infrared heating element is positioned in the center of the fleece blanket positioned over the top of your hand, warming the entire area of the pouch with a warm steady heat.

This is really a creative idea and it works wonderfully. Keeps your mouse and your mouse hand comfortably warm. Your mouse moves freely and it’s easy to slip your hand in and out of the pouch, you don’t even have to look. The only problem I see is when you have to take your hand out of the warm pouch and leave it out in the cold.



VALUERAYS® USB WARM MOUSE PAD

The ValueRays® Warm Mouse Pad is a USB heated computer mouse pad delivering infrared heat to the mouse pad’s surface. As with all the other ValueRays® Warm accessories, the surface of the heated mouse pad is warm not hot, heated 99 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit.

The pad has a black compact pad panel and smooth movement suitable for all types of mechanical mouse and optical mouse usage. The pad measures about 10″ X 10″ and is surrounded in plastic trim illuminated by a blue light. The mouse pad has a raised cuff where you can comfortably rest your wrist..

The USB Warm Mouse Pad has two USB cords to connect to your computer. One is specifically
for the infrared heating element. You just unplug this cable if you don’t want to use the warmer function.

Also, the Warm Mouse Pad is a USB hub, featuring 4 USB 2 ports to use with a variety of USB devices. What more could you ask for in a mouse pad? Comforting warmth and additional USB ports for your computer.

SUMMARY

All of these ValueRays® products are unique and create a warm, soothing computer environment for those of us who have hand medical problems or injuries. If you have cold or painful hands for any reason and find working on the computer unpleasant I would recommend you try at least one of these products. I think you will find, as I have, the ergonomic design and soothing infrared heat they generate will improve your computer experience and make it enjoyable to work with your mouse and keyboard again.

You can purchase the ValyeRays® Warm Mouse Heated Keyboard products singly, or in sets of a combination of two, three of four products. For combinations and pricing visit the http://www.warm-mouse-heated-keyboard.com/ website. Also, check out the Coupon Page for available discounts.

In addition to the discounts they are offering free shipping. That’s right, FREE SHIPPING including Alaska.

I also want to mention a new ValueRays® product that will be available in October. The ValueRays® Pink Warm Mouse III. A portion of each purchase of the Pink ValueRays® Warm Mouse III will be donated to the American Cancer Society’s fight against cancer.

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Sunday, August 23, 2009

Cold Hands, Cold Fingers, Tingling Hands, Numb Hands & Fingers: How About Some Heat Relief!

Cold Hands, Cold Fingers, Tingling Hands, Numb Hands & Fingers:  How About Some Heat Relief!

by Anna Miller, Warm-Mouse-Heated-Keyboard.com
http://www.IGMproducts.com & http://www.ValueRays.com


It doesn't matter if you sit and think, or if you just sit! It doesn't matter if it's Summer, Winter, Spring or Fall. When your hands are cold, your entire body feels the chill. Chills create distraction, and the only thing to think about is the cold. Not all people have cold hands when using the computer, but for those who do, there are infrared heat, ergonomic computer work aids to help cold hand pain.

Three items used whenever we use a computer are the computer mouse, mouse pad and computer keyboard. Using the computer mouse and keyboard with cold hands is very uncomfortable and at times very painful. A cold mouse hand creates numb fingers, and the chill is felt to the bone. Trying to grip a computer mouse and typing with freezing, frigid fingers and hands is nearly impossible. The solution is an infrared heat warm mouse, heated mouse pad and heated computer keyboard.

Heated computer gadgets
and mouse hand warmers connect to the computer using an USB port. USB connections create an energy-efficient and cost-effective source of heat energy during winter months or during the summer when air-conditioning creates a cold work space and hands become cold. Some people sit near a drafty window or under a ceiling fan where cold drafts become a problem. Using a heated mouse, warm mouse pad and warm keyboard pad can help relieve cold hand pain.

When an USB warm computer gadget is designed with a carbon fiber, it creates infrared heat. Infrared heat is an excellent source of healing energy. The natural source of infrared heat comes from the sun. It's the deep penetrating heat we feel when the sun's rays hit our skin. The sun's natural infrared rays are capable of penetrating deep into the body where they elevate surface temperature and activate healthy body functions.

The infrared heat from USB warm computer gadgets is the same as the sun's infrared heat without the harmful UV rays of the sun. The infrared waves are a safe alternative to natural sun infrared rays. The infrared rays heat objects by direct light conversion - a process to directly warm an object; i.e., the warm mouse, warm mouse pad, and warm keyboard pad, and not the surrounding air. Infrared heat rays from the warming mouse, warming mouse pad and warming keyboard pad penetrate the hand, warm the muscles, tissues and dilate the blood vessels. The infrared heating process improves blood circulation by allowing the blood to flow more freely through the cold, painful, tense hand.

A standard, USB heated computer mouse connects to the computer through an USB (United Serial Bus) port and delivers infrared heat creating a comfortably warm mouse hand. It has the basic functions and characteristics of a standard mouse with the added feature of delivering heat to a cold mouse hand. The USB infrared heated, warm computer mouse is an efficient way to stay warm by using energy generated from the computer. The USB warm mouse is ergonomically shaped and comfortable to hold. It is an optical scrolling mouse with an accurate 800dpi. The warm mouse has two buttons and three functions, and it works with any PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. A warm mouse has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

The heated mouse pad connects to the computer through an USB (United Serial Bus) port and delivers infrared heat to the mouse hand. It has many more functions compared to a standard mouse pad. The USB heated mouse pad creates a warm mouse pad surface to rest the hand and wrist. It's an efficient way to keep the mouse hand warm. The USB warm mouse pad is ergonomically shaped and comfortable to use. It has an ergonomic wrist support pad at the front of the mousepad, and at the opposite end of the mousepad there are four USB ports. The warming mouse pad is constructed of a smooth, hard surface compatible to use with any mechanical or optical mouse for ease of mouse movement. A standard heated mouse pad measures about 10" x 10" with a height of about .5 inch. When plugged into the USB port, the heated pad illuminates around three sides with colored lights. The warm mouse pad operates on a safe, low voltage and generates soothing heated mouse pad warmth. The warm mouse pad works with a 2.0 USB outlet on a PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. It has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

The warm mouse and heated mouse pad help the cold mouse hand and serve a purpose when used together or separately. When the two items are used in combination with third item, a mouse hand warmer blanket pouch, infrared heat is insulated inside and under a mouse hand blanket creating a perfectly warm mouse hand environment.

With the mouse hand warm, the keyboard hands are still an issue for the person who suffers with cold hands. The heated computer keyboard pad connects to the computer through an USB port and delivers infrared heat to the hands, arms and wrists. It is ergonomically shaped and offers support for the keyboard hands and wrists for typing on the keyboard. The wrist pad is easy to maintain. It has a nylon cover with a zipper closure making it easy to remove and hand wash/air dry. A standard USB heated computer keyboard pad measures about 16 inches long, 3 inches wide and has a height of about 3/4" tall. It has a soft sponge insert making the wrist pad very comfortable for keyboard use. It aligns your wrist ergonomically over the keyboard adding support and warmth while you type or work. The USB heated keyboard wrist pad works with any PC, Mac or Notebook style computer. It has a "plug & play" install with no additional software needed.

There is help for people who have cold hands when using the computer. Warm computer gadgets to help cold hands are available online. Making an investment in one or all four computer gadgets to help relieve the cold has high a payoff value when cold hands cause pain and discomfort. A simple Google search for "infrared heat computer gadgets" will provide available online options.


Visit the ValueRays® Warm Mouse Giveaway Blog for Free ValueRays® USB Hand Warmers Infrared Heaters



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Saturday, August 8, 2009

Win a ValueRays Warm Computer Mouse! Giveaway Contest!

Warm Computer Mouse, Heated Computer Mouse, Warm Mouse, Heated Mouse, ValueRays



Warm Computer Mouse by ValueRays® - Giveaway Contest - Win a Heated Computer Mouse!

Win a ValueRays® Warm Mouse. It's a USB Computer Mouse with infrared heat to keep your mouse hand warm. It's the healthy way to use the computer. Helps relieve hand pain!

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

ValueRays Warm Mouse Pad Giveaway


Click here and enter the giveaway contest for one ValueRays Warm Mouse Pad! It is a heated mousepad using a carbon fiber heating element making it a healthy source of infrared heat for your cold hands! The surface gets warm, not hot and it's safe for the computer, mouse and people! It measures about 10x10 inches and has two USB cords to control the multi-funtional mousepad.
This giveaway is sponsored by an authorized ValueRays supplier: http://IGMproducts.com


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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Cold Hands? Warm Mouse! Win a Heated Computer Mouse Giveaway



The ValueRays® Heated Mouse is an optical mouse with a long cord and an on/off control on the USB cord. It heats from 99-104 degrees Fahrenheit. Many people suffer with cold hands. The ValueRays® heated mouse is ideal for people who have cold hands, work in a cold area or have a condition causing cold hands like poor circulation, arthritis or carpal tunnel syndrome.



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Friday, July 3, 2009

ValueRays® USB Hand Warmers - A Story to Be Told!

Here's Our Story

ValueRays® is the trademark brand chosen for our products because infrared heat is a valuable source of healing for people who suffer with cold hand pain when using the computer.

ValueRays® = Valuable Infrared Radiant Heat Rays.

The home-based business came about after spending over 13 years owning and operating an ecommerce website with freezing cold hands from arthritis and carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms -- tingling, numbness, pain. Plus, I had employees who suffered with cold hands and carpal tunnel surgery issues. Cold hands when using the computer became a personal issue for me, and my goal was to solve the problem. In January of 2008, I began design specs for a mouse hand warmer, and in February applied for a patent. In May of 2008, my ecommerce business sold making time to focus on solving the cold computer hands problem. In June 2008, I invented the Mouse Hand Warmer® blanket pouch. It was commended by experts and marketed. After the Mouse Hand Warmer®'s market test by late 2008, and with the encouragement of family and friends, in February 2009, I launched the ValueRays® Brand of USB Infrared Heated Hand Warmers on the website www.Warm-Mouse-Heated-Keyboard.com.

It took a year of research and development to introduce a healthy product line to solve the cold mouse hand problem. Plus, with the addition of infrared heat, ValueRays® created a solution for cold keyboard hands, too. ValueRays® blossomed into a viable resource of cost-effective and energy-efficient computer products for people who suffer with cold hands when using the computer.

Far infrared ray (FIR) is a natural deep healing source of warmth penetrating deep through the skin's layers to the muscle tissue -- even as deeply as the bones -- improving circulation and reducing inflamed tissues and joints. This radiant heat is the deep warmth one feels from sunlight without the harmful UV rays of the sun. It's been used as a healer for hundreds, if not thousands of years by Eastern Cultures. And, now people can benefit from its healthy effects by using a variety of products and devices.

The ValueRays® USB hand warmers are infrared heaters and provide "infrared heat" therapy for computer users with hand pain and cold hands. ValueRays® USB infrared heated, warm mouse, heated mousepad, heated keyboard pad and Mouse Hand Warmer® provide deep healing infrared heat for the cold mouse hand and cold keyboard hands. ValueRays® USB Hand Warmers provide a healthy way to use the computer!

Make the computer help you, not harm you! Reduce stress. Improve circulation. Keep warm! Infrared heat penetrates deep through the skin's layers to the muscle tissue relieving tension and stress. Infrared heat improves blood circulation; helps heal and reduce the onset of computer-related hand injuries - RSI, CTD, CTS. Plus, when heat is needed for arthritis joint stiffness, infrared heat therapy helps reduce pain associated with arthritis.

Poor circulatory conditions like diabetes, Raynaud's and carpal tunnel have cold hand symptoms. USB infrared heat computer accessories relieve the cold and improve circulation to the affected areas. Studies show about 20-30 minutes of infrared heat therapy daily produce positive results.

The use of infrared heat for computer users is an innovative solution to a widespread problem. In an effort to support non profits, we offer free advertising on our website to the American Diabetes Foundation, American Cancer Society, American Arthritis Foundation. We also support the Raynaud's Foundation in the USA & UK. Plus, we work closely with the American Occupational Therapy Foundation. One of our most recent fundraisers is with the American Cancer Society. Our Team raised over $3500 in May 2009 for the Relay for Life Cancer Walk. Future efforts include a pink Warm Mouse III product for our website with partial proceeds going to the American Cancer Society, product donations to the Raynaud's Foundations and to Occupational Therapists throughout the USA.

The Founder & Chief Executive of the UK Raynaud's & Scleroderma Association tested our products and endorsed them for Raynaud's sufferers. Her testimonial is on our website. Plus, we have received positive feedback and testimonials from a variety of other professional groups, hand therapists, massage therapists, occupational therapists and chronic cold hand sufferers nationwide.

We are a small home-based business with a small selection of products with HUGE benefits for our users and partners. We want our website to be more than a place to purchase products. We want our visitors to learn, become our partners and help support our mission to provide a healthy computer work area using deep healing infrared heat. We provide an extensive Learning Center and many other possibilities for creating a virtual partnership with our visitors. We plan to grown and add more healthy USB infrared heated products in the near future.

Computer use is at an all-time high! With computer use comes an array of computer-related injuries. Our goal is to teach people to use the computer in a proactive healthy manner to help prevent the onset of computer-related injury. Make the computer work for you, not harm you! ValueRays® infrared heat can help us achieve our goal.

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Fairy Blog Mother Reaps the Benefits of Infrared Heat for Cold Hands! Mouse Hand Warmer Giveaway!








Anna Miller's Mouse Hand Warmer invention designed in February 2008 has taken some pretty intense modifications over the past several months. Introduced to the technology market in July 2008, the latest version of the Mouse Hand Warmer just hit the Internet in June. It's a mouse hand blanket and has infrared heat! It's like a mini-electric blanket for a cold mouse hand with the deep healing effects of infrared heat! You might think a cold mouse hand is an uncommon experience, but think again. Many people have what's labeled as chronic cold hand pain associated with poor circulation from computer over-use. Yup, there's another condition from computer overload and it's making our hands as numb as ice!

The Fairy Blog Mother just listed a giveaway contest on her blog for a ValueRays USB Mouse Hand Warmer. Visit the Fairy Blog Mother's website and follow the instructions to win.


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Wednesday, June 10, 2009

ValueRays® Warm Mouse Giveaway - Cold Hands a Daily Challenge for Raynaud's

ValueRays® Hand Warmer Giveaway - Cold Hands a Daily Challenge for Raynaud's



Cold hands when using the computer a problem? Head over to Barefoot Mommies and enter the ValueRays Warm Mouse Giveaway! The ValueRays Warm Mouse uses deep healing infrared heat to soothe the aching and cold mouse hand. The heated mouse is ergonomically shaped and provides relief to a cold mouse hand by delivering a steady flow of warmth using the USB connection on the computer. Use the computer in a healthy way.... Use a ValueRays Warm Mouse.
_____________________
Raynaud's Phenomenon
from Patient.co.uk

Raynaud's phenomenon occurs when the extremities of the body, usually the fingers and toes, change colour and may become painful. It is due to a narrowing (constriction) of the small blood vessels on exposure to the cold, or to a change in temperature, or to emotional stress. In most cases, the cause is not known. In some cases, Raynaud's is a symptom of an underlying condition such as scleroderma, lupus or rheumatoid arthritis. Treatment is to keep warm. Drugs to open up the blood vessels are used in some cases.

What is Raynaud's?

Raynaud's phenomenon, often just called Raynaud's, is a condition where the small blood vessels of the fingers become narrow (constrict), most commonly when they are in a cool environment. Sometimes blood vessels to other extremities such as the toes, ears and nose are affected. It is named after Dr Maurice Raynaud, the man who first described it in 1862.

What are the symptoms of Raynaud's?

Typically, symptoms develop in fingers when you become cool. For example, in cold weather. At first the fingers go white and cool. This happens because the small blood vessels in the fingers narrow (constrict). The fingers then go a bluish colour (or even purple or black in severe cases). This happens because the oxygen is used up quickly from the blood in the narrowed blood vessels. The fingers then go bright red. This happens because blood vessels open up again (dilate) and the blood flow returns. This may cause tingling, throbbing, numbness, and pain (which can be severe in some cases).

Many people with Raynaud's do not have the full classic colour changes, but develop bouts of uncomfortable, pale, cold fingers. Only the fingers are affected in most cases. In some cases the toes are also affected. Less commonly other extremities of the body are affected such as the earlobes, nose, nipples, or tongue. Each bout of symptoms can last from minutes to hours.

Raynaud's phenomenon is usually mild, with infrequent, brief bouts of symptoms that last just a few minutes. Sometimes it is moderate with more frequent bouts of symptoms that last longer. Rarely, it is severe with repeated frequent bouts with each bout lasting longer periods of time.

What causes Raynaud's?
Primary Raynaud's - when the cause is not known. In most cases there is no known cause (more than 9 in 10 cases). This is called primary Raynaud's. The small blood vessels in the fingers, toes, etc, are just more sensitive than usual to cool temperatures. The reason for this is not known. Symptoms are triggered more easily in some cases than others. Even mildly cool weather, or getting something out of the freezer, can trigger symptoms in some people. Strong emotion may also trigger symptoms in some cases.

Usually, all fingers on both hands are affected in primary Raynaud's. It also tends to run in some families. Women are affected much more often than men. It usually first develops before the age of 30. There are no other symptoms apart from those described above, and symptoms go completely after each bout.

Secondary Raynaud's - due to an underlying cause. In less than 1 in 10 cases, there is an underlying cause. This is called secondary Raynaud's. Various condition of blood vessels, joints, muscles, nerves, or skin can cause secondary Raynaud's. For example, scleroderma, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, SLE (systemic lupus erythematosus), and other 'connective tissue' diseases. If you have secondary Raynaud's you will normally have other symptoms in addition to the symptoms of Raynaud's. The Raynaud's is just one feature of the condition. For example, you may also have joint pains, rashes, joint swelling, etc.

Often the underlying condition is already present, and you may develop Raynaud's as a complication. Sometimes the symptoms of Raynaud's occur first, and other symptoms of the underlying condition develop weeks, months or even years later.

In secondary Raynaud's, symptoms may first begin in just one or two fingers on one hand. This is in contrast to primary Raynaud's when all fingers on both hands are typically affected. Certain medicines may also cause secondary Raynaud's as a side-effect (see below).

Hand-arm vibration syndrome (vibration white finger) is one common cause of secondary Raynaud's. This is caused by using vibrating tools regularly over a long time. For example, it occurs in some shipyard workers, mine workers, road diggers, etc. It is thought that repeated vibrations over time may damage the small blood vessels or their nerve supply.

How common is Raynaud's?

Raynaud's phenomenon is a common disorder. About 1 in 20 people develop Raynaud's phenomenon. Up to 9 in 10 cases are primary Raynaud's. Primary Raynaud's usually first develops in teenagers and young adults, but it can develop at any age. Secondary Raynaud's can develop at any age when the underlying condition develops.

Do I need any tests to confirm the diagnosis?

Not in most cases. There is no test that confirms primary Raynaud's. The diagnosis of primary Raynaud's is made on the basis of the typical symptoms (described above) and there is no abnormality found that may suggest a secondary cause when a doctor examines you.

Features that may suggest secondary Raynaud's include:
  • Onset of symptoms after 30 years of age.
  • Abrupt onset with rapid progression and worsening of symptoms.
  • Severe symptoms that may include an ulcer or gangrene of part of a finger or toe.
  • Symptoms that only affect one hand or foot, or the symptoms are not the same or as severe on both hands and feet.
  • Joint pains or arthritis.
  • Skin rashes.
  • Dry eyes or mouth.
  • Muscle weakness or pain.
  • Swallowing difficulties.
  • Breathlessness.
  • Mouth ulcers.
  • Previous work with vibrating tools.

Blood tests and other tests may be done if secondary Raynaud's is suspected. Sometimes the diagnosis of an underlying cause is already known (for example, rheumatoid arthritis) and the development of Raynaud's is not a surprising feature.

What are the possible complications of Raynaud's?

Primary Raynaud's - complications seldom, if ever, occur. Secondary Raynaud's - complications occur in a small number of cases and include: ulcers developing on affected fingers and toes; scarring of tips of fingers and toes; gangrene (tissue death) of parts of affected fingers and toes.
What can I do to help? Smoking may make symptoms worse. The chemicals in tobacco can cause the small blood vessels to narrow. If you smoke, stopping smoking may ease or even cure the problem. Some medicines that are used to treat other conditions sometimes trigger symptoms, or make them worse. The medicine may cause the blood vessels to narrow. Such medicines include: beta-blockers, some anti-migraine medicines, decongestants, and, very occasionally, the contraceptive pill. Don't stop a prescribed medicine if you suspect it may be making symptoms worse. See your doctor to discuss possible alternatives. Other drugs. Caffeine (in tea, coffee, cola, and in some medicines) triggers symptoms in some people. Try cutting out caffeine for a few weeks to see if it helps. Amphetamines and cocaine may also be a trigger.

Try to keep warm in cool weather or in cool environments:
Keep your hands and feet warm. Warm gloves, socks, and shoes are essential when you are out in cool weather. Keep your whole body warm, not just your hands and feet. Although your hands and feet are the most important, symptoms are less likely to occur if you keep your entire body warm. So, wrap up warmly before going into cooler areas such as outside on cold days. For example, wear hats and scarves in addition to warm clothes. It is best to put on the gloves when you are warm, before going into colder areas. Ideally, keep gloves, socks, and headgear in an airing cupboard or near a radiator so they will be warm when put on. If you have severe symptoms, or symptoms that are easily triggered, then portable heat packs, and battery heated gloves and socks are useful. The Raynaud's and Scleroderma Association have a list of suppliers - see below for their details. Your pharmacist or local medical supplier may also be able to advise.
Try not to touch cold objects. For example, use a towel or gloves when removing food from the freezer or working with cold food. Regular exercise is recommended by many experts. Exercise your hands and feet frequently to improve the circulation. When a bout of symptoms develops, warm the affected hands or feet as soon as possible. Soaking the hands or feet in warm running water is a good way to get warm (but take care that the water does not become too hot, or lose its heat and become cool).


What treatments can help prevent Raynaud's symptoms?

Keeping warm is the main treatment. Symptoms are much less likely to occur, and be less severe, if you keep warm (described above). Other treatments are needed only in some cases.

Medication
A medicine called nifedipine may be advised if symptoms are severe. It works by 'opening up' (dilating) the small blood vessels. Some people take nifedipine regularly, each day, to prevent symptoms. Some people take nifedipine just during the winter, or just during cold weather spells. If you are prescribed nifedipine, read the leaflet that comes in the medicine packet for a full list of possible side-effects and cautions. Some main points about nifedipine include:

Most people do not get any side-effects, or only minor side-effects. Of side-effects that may occur, the most common are headache, flushing, nausea (feeling sick), and dizziness.

Nifedipine should not be taken by:

  • Pregnant women or breastfeeding women.
  • People with myocardial infarction, aortic stenosis, heart failure, peripheral oedema, symptomatic low blood pressure, and unstable or acute attacks of angina.
  • A lower dose may be required in the elderly and people with severe liver disease.
  • Do not drink grapefruit juice if you take nifedipine. The two can interact.
  • If you also take a medicine called rifampicin it may reduce how well nifedipine works.
  • You need your blood pressure monitored if you take both a beta-blocker medicine and nifedipine.


Various other medicines may be tried if nifedipine is not helpful, or causes side-effects.

Stress counselling or relaxation techniques. These may be helpful if you have primary Raynaud's and the symptoms are triggered by stress or emotion.

Treatment for an underlying condition -May be needed if you have secondary Raynaud's.

'Nerve blocks' or other hospital based treatments -May be tried if you have severe Raynaud's which is not helped by other treatments.

What is the outlook (prognosis)?

Primary Raynaud's
The outlook for people with primary Raynaud's is usually good. Most people have mild symptoms that do not interfere much with daily life. People with more severe symptoms often respond well to treatment with nifedipine. In some cases the condition remits (goes away) in time. In one study that followed up people with primary Raynaud's over seven years, the condition had gone away in nearly 2 in 3 cases at some point over the study period.

Rarely, someone who is thought to have primary Raynaud's develops other symptoms several years later and the diagnosis is changed to secondary Raynaud's.

Secondary Raynaud's
There are various underlying conditions that can cause secondary Raynaud's and their severity can vary. In general, symptoms are often more severe than with primary Raynaud's, and tend to respond less well to treatment. In some situations, treating an underlying condition will ease the symptoms of Raynaud's.

Further information and help
The Raynaud's and Scleroderma Association
112 Crewe Road, Alsager, Cheshire, ST7 2JA
Tel (helpline): 0800 917 2494
Tel (office): 01270 872776
Web: www.raynauds.org.uk

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Warm Hands Can Make for a Healthy Heart

Cold Hands? Cold Computer Hands?  Cold Mouse Hand?  Get yourself the ValueRays Ergonomic USB Hand Warmers - as seen in AOTA Conference Magazine Cold hands when using the computer are a common fact. Yet, it is something most people are just recently paying closer attention to..... Why? Cold hands are a sign of many medical conditions and can be the first sign of Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI) and Cumulative Trauma Disorder (CTD). If you over use your computer hands, you may want to upgrade to USB hand warmers - infrared heated ergonomic computer accessories.

by John Scott

Getting a good night's sleep is so easy for the majority but, when something goes wrong with this natural reaction to physical tiredness, the way you feel the next day can be serious. It can be simply that you feel excessively tired. You walk around in a daze, feeling as if you had no sleep at all. This can affect your performance at work because you find it more difficult to concentrate. Moods can also change for the worse with you feeling more irritable and bad tempered. Headaches become more common.

One quite understandable reaction is to reach for the ambien bottle which has a proven track record for helping people get to sleep and stay asleep for longer. But, like many conditions, insomnia is not "cured" by taking medication. The best that ambien can do is to give relief to the immediate symptoms. In the long term, cognitive behavioural therapy provides a "cure" in most cases. So the answer is just walking into your local doctor's surgery and get an appointment? Well, not necessarily.

In an increasing number of rural and urban areas in the US, there is a widening gap between the supply of primary care physicians and the demand for their services. Because pay levels are lower than in hospitals and the debts from medical school are higher, only about a quarter of newly qualified physicians go into general practice. It can now take months to get an appointment as the population ages and more boomers require treatment. The shortage of doctors is also highlighted in states like Massachusetts where new health insurance legislation is restoring cover to many who have gone years without insurance. It is an irony that universal health cover is meaningless without a significant increase in the number of doctors in general practice. This situation will only grow worse as older doctors retire over the next decade. As it applies to insomnia, not only is there is a shortage of physicians but also of therapists.

Against this background, it was interesting to see a new potential solution for the treatment of insomnia. It has long been known that as people fall asleep, the circulation of blood slows and more blood stays longer in the arms and legs. As a result, the hands and feet warm slightly. In the Center for Sleep Medicine in New York, specialists have begun to train insomniacs in the use of biofeedback techniques to replicate this physical response.

It usually takes between two and three hours of training spread over a number of weeks for the brain to learn how to control the body's heart rate, circulation and temperature rise. About 90% of those taking part in the experiment have mastered the necessary skills and have found it easier to get to sleep. Although biofeedback and relaxation skills have been used alongside or as an alternative to ambien for some time, this is one of the first major centers to run a full-scale training exercise. If this technique can be proved effective in a statistically significant number of ordinary people rather than volunteers patient and persevering enough to learn a physical skill, it could be a highly cost-effective solution to a difficult medical problem.

As it stands, physicians are forced into the expedient of prescribing ambien to treat insomnia because there are too few therapists. The heart and temperature monitors are relatively cheap. If demand rose, the price would drop further. A simple "how to" guide plus the equipment might be all that many people need to relearn the art of failing asleep.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Beyond cold feet: painfully cold fingers and toes may signal Raynaud's disease

There are products available to help solve the cold hands problem. Visit WARM-MOUSE-HEATED-KEYBOARD.com to learn more about the benefits of using USB Infrared Heated Computer Accessories. Just plug & play to generate instant therapeutic infrared heat and warmth while using the computer. It's as simple as that! Keep your hands warm and do yourself a favor. Infrared heat therapy helps improve blood circulation to restricted areas. To learn more, visit the Learning Center.

Painful cold hands and fingers are the sign of a problem. It's best to seek medical advice if cold hands interfere with your daily life activities.


Vegetarian Times , by Joanne McAllister Smart

I first heard of Raynaud's disease while rock climbing on a cool spring day. The heat of the sun had yet to caress the cliff, and I could scarcely feel my fingers as I made my way up a 60-foot crack. It's not easy climbing when your fingers are numb - they feel big and clumsy, but I was on a top rope, meaning that even if I slipped, the rope above me would keep me from faring. After finishing the route and being lowered off the cliff, I complained about my cold fingers. As I worked to warm them, my climbing partner suggested I might have Raynaud's disease. She described it as a fairly common condition that causes hypersensitivity to cold.


Though I hated to disappoint my friend - she's one of those people who likes to find an underlying disorder for every minor health complaint - I assured her that it was just that die rock was really cold. In no time my fingers felt normal, and I was ready to climb again - though I was glad the rock had warmed up.

That my friend thought I might have Raynaud's was actually not too far-fetched. According to the Mayo clinic, one in 20 Americans has the disease, named for the French physician who described it more than a century ago, with women four times to five times as likely to develop it. Leonard Bielory, M.D., director of the Allergy and Immunology division at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey estimates that S percent of the population has it. Other estimates run from 2 percent to as high as 10 percent.

Change in circulation in the hands or feet is a normal physiological response, a reflex mechanism that causes the blood vessels to narrow when exposed to the cold. Almost everyone can recall a time when their fingers, nose or toes were painfully cold, but for people with Raynaud's, even minimal exposure can cause the small arteries that supply the fingers and the toes to contract suddenly, cutting off blood flow. During an attack, which can last for minutes or hours, the affected fingers and toes tingle, bum or go numb. (In rare cases, sustained restriction of the arteries causes ulceration.) Aside from unusually cold extremities, Raynaud's is defined by color: Fingers and toes turn white due to a lack of blood, then blue as the blood sluggishly returns. As they warm and normal blood flow is re-established, they turn red.

When such symptoms are the result of a known underlying disorder, such as atherosclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis or lupus, or are caused by long-term use of vibrating tools like jackhammers and chain saws, the disease is known as secondary Raynaud's phenomenon. Primary Raynaud's phenomenon - what my climbing buddy thought I had - has no known cause. "It's not a disease," says Frederick Wigley, M.D., associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University and co-director of the Raynaud's center there. "People with primary Raynaud's phenomenon are perfectly fine."

Though Wigley is technically right, people who suffer from severe cases of Raynaud's view it as more than a nuisance. "I get frustrated," says Barbara Lax, a fund-raiser who works in New York City. "I'm fearful of going outside because I know it will cause me pain." Lax, 42, says her Raynaud's began while she was in her mid-20s. At times during the winter, her feet would become so painful she could barely put on shoes. When she goes outside in the winter, Lax bundles up from head to her often painful toes.

Bunding up when it's cold is perhaps the most obvious advice for preventing an attack. But though winter may be almost a distant memory, for people who suffer from Raynaud's disease, the discomfort of numb fingers may be only as far away as an aggressively air-conditioned office. Bielory has pointed out that although Raynaud's is more prevalent in winter, "it can occur any time in a variety of cold environments, such as the frozen foods section of a supermarket." And according to Wigley, it's not necessarily constant cold temperatures that cause attacks; it's often die shifting of temperatures. "A lot of my patients have the worst time at the changing of the seasons," he says.

Stress also can bring on an attack because it creates the same reaction in the body as does the cold (think of the term "cold feet"). Under stress, blood is pulled from the hands and feet to the brain and internal organs to help one think and act more quickly.

If you have primary Raynaud's - and it's important to undergo a medical exam to make sure your symptoms are not a sign a more serious disorder - there is a lot you can do to help prevent attacks. Keep warm and dry in cold weather. Before going out in the cold, have a warm meal or drink to raise your core body temperature. (Avoid caffeine, however, as it constricts blood vessels.) Run your car in cold weather to warm it up. In all seasons, keep mittens near the freezer to use when handling frozen foods, and use insulated glasses for cold drinks. Drink plenty of fluids - dehydration can aggravate the condition by reducing blood volume - but pass on the booze. Alcohol increases blood flow to the skin, making you feel warm at first, but then cold as the heat is soon lost to air. Avoid smoking as it further restricts blood flow.

Once an attack has started, your first move should be to get warm. You can also try swinging your arms around to increase blood flow to your fingers. Rosemary Gladstar, herbalist and author of Herbal Healing for Women (Simon and Schuster, 1993), suggests a tincture (herbs soaked in alcohol) of ginkgo and ginger to help increase circulation quickly. (You can make your own tincture - combine one ounce of powdered herb with one, 80 - or 100-proof alcohol in a glass jar, cap tightly and store in a dark place for two weeks; shake well, strain out the herbs, and place a few drops under your tongue with an eyedropper - or buy a commercially prepared one at a natural food store.) She also suggests rubbing St. John's wort oil mixed with a warming oil like ginger or sage on affected fingers and toes. St. john's wort, according to Gladstar, helps soothe damaged nerve endings.

Proven long-lasting treatment is less readily available. According to The Doctor's Book of Home Remedies (Rodale Press, 1990), you can condition yourself to overcome chills and train your hands to heat up in the cold, with an adaptation of a technique developed by U.S. Army researchers in Alaska. In a room that's a comfortable temperature, submerge your hands in a container of warm water for three to five minutes. Then go into a freezing room (outside in wintertime unless you have access to a walk-in freezer) and again dip your hands in warm water for 10 minutes. The cold environment would normally make your blood vessels constrict, but the warm water makes them open. Repeatedly training vessels to open despite the cold around them may enable you to counter the restriction reflex even without the warm water.

For patients with severe cases of Raynaud's, drugs such as short-acting Nifedipine may be prescribed to help reduce the intensity of the attacks by relaxing the walls of the blood vessels. But these drugs, used to treat high blood pressure, can have side effects including headache, dizziness, rapid heartbeat and water weight gain.

Dr. Wigley suggests that to treat Raynaud's, it's important for the patient to understand what triggers an attack. Whether the condition is stress-related or related to the cold (in most cases, it's a combination of both), the treatment that looks the most promising is biofeedback, which teaches a person how to control a physiological function.

The principle behind biofeedback is that every physiological change is accompanied by the appropriate change in mental or emotional states (conscious or unconscious); the theory also involves the notion that any function that can be monitored with results made available continually to subjects can be voluntarily controlled by subjects. According to Wellness Medicine (American Health Press, 1987) "voluntary warming of the extremities using feedback with a thermal machine has been very successful. Following training, elevated temperature can often be maintained despite cold temperatures."

In biofeedback, subjects are attached to a recording device that electronically monitors a physiological function and presents a visual or auditory signal to the subject. On observing this information, the subject is able to vary the internal neurological elements controlling the monitored function by assuming a relaxed, quiet internal mental state. Though the electronic monitoring is done by trained staff, patients usually do relaxation exercises on their own between sessions.


Barbara Lax had some success with biofeedback when she tried it through the International Center for the Disabled in New York City about 10 years ago. "They [staff members at the center] taught me how to find imagery that would represent peacefulness, warmth, calm." Lax imagined a hot bubble bath. "That was my image; I got to the point where I could feel myself slide into the tub." Lax believes her biofeedback experience helped reduce the severity of her attacks but says that over time the effects of her sessions wore off. "It's something you need to practice all the time," she says. Though Lax is currently taking the drug Cardisem, a calcium channel blocker used to treat angina, to help combat her Raynaud's, she is thinking about trying biofeedback again.


Biofeedback studies concerning Raynaud's - though promising - have not been conclusive, says Wigley. Currently both he and Bielory are involved in separate ongoing clinical trials funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health testing biofeedback treatment for Raynaud's sufferers. The trial is also looking at the effectiveness of long-acting Nifedipine in separate tests. Though neither Wigley nor Bielory could comment much on their double-blind studies, Wigley says the trials are to compare the results of biofeedback to the results of taking the drug.

Other non-traditional ways to help alleviate Raynaud's attacks may also emerge. Chiropractors (health practitioners who use hands-on manipulation to bring the patient's spinal cord into alignment, thus helping alleviate other symptoms the patient may have) and osteopaths (medical doctors who focus on the impact of the musculoskeletal structure on all of the body's systems) claim success in treating the condition by working on the neck and upper spine to improve nerve and circulation supply. Lax's osteopath, George Kessler, D.O., has used manipulation to help his patients with Raynaud's. One patient, whose Raynaud's seemed exacerbated by a back injury, saw great improvement after undergoing cranialsacral balancing, a manipulation technique involving the spine that normalizes the flow of the cerebrospinal fluid. "Even I was amazed" at the patient's improvement, says Kessler, who practices in New York City. Kessler says that more traditional manipulation of the neck, as well as body massage, "relaxes symptoms, but never really resolves the disease.

Iron-rich foods also may help relax symptoms, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Human Nutrition Research Center in Grand Forks, N.D. Researchers measured the effects of dietary iron on six healthy women when they entered a cold chamber. When the women took only one-third of the recommended amount of iron for 80 days, they lost 29 percent more body heat than when they were on an iron-rich diet. You can find iron in leafy greens like spinach, lentils and other dried beans; orange juice and other foods high in vitamin C help the body absorb iron.

To boost the circulatory and nervous systems, herbalist Gladstar recommends regularly drinking tea made from hawthorn berries. For overall relaxation, she recommends soothing herbs like chamomile and valerian. Aside from all these suggestions, Wigley maintains that the real trick to living with Raynaud's is "recognizing what the challenges are."

Barbara Lax understands that advice. "I learned how to know my body," she says. She's even taken up ice-skating. "But," she adds, "I skate indoors."

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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Cold Hands Warm Mouse by ValueRays - Shop Wholesale Online

ValueRays WARM MOUSE -- ValueRays MOUSE HAND WARMER -- ValueRays WARM MOUSE PAD


Are cold hands a problem for you or your clients? Great News for Online Wholesale Shoppers! Buy ValueRays Warm Mouse, Mouse Hand Warmer and Warm Mouse Pad at very deep discounts in small quantities for your practice, store or online boutique.

Don't be fooled by cheap imitations. The ValueRays Brand is a High Quality USB infrared heater. Visit the ValueRays Wholesale Store and place an immediate order for fast delivery. Plan your Fall budget now with deep discounted and best wholesale prices for products to relieve cold hand pain.

Many people suffer from medical conditions which cause cold hands. Arthritis, Raynaud's, Diabetes, Poor Circulatory Conditions, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome and Fibromyalgia are just a few!


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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Cold Hands Help: Noninvasive Evaluation Of Hand Circulation for Cold Hands


If you or someone you know suffers with cold hands when using the computer due to poor circulation, the cold hands problem is solved! USB Infrared Heat Computer Accessories provide warmth using the computer. Cold hands are gone using the ValueRays Warm Mouse and ValueRays Warm Mouse Pad inside the Mouse Hand Warmer blanket pouch. It's three handy cost-effective, energy-efficient computer gadgets you want to soothe aching cold hands due to arthritis, rheumatism, diabetes, carpal tunnel syndrome, Raynaud's phenomenon, and countless other conditions with cold hand symptoms. Prices start at $19.95 with free shipping and no sales tax!

Featured Article:
from J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
If you suffer from cold hands due to poor hand circulation, read this study located on the J Thorac website. Cardiovascular surgery may lead effect hand circulation as noted below. For more details of this study, please visit jtcs.ctsnetjournals.org.

Objective:
Radial artery harvesting for coronary artery bypass may lead to digit ischemia if collateral hand circulation is inadequate. The modified Allen's test is the most common preoperative screening test used. Allen test, is used to test blood supply to the hand. Unfortunately, this test has high false-positive and false-negative rates. The purpose of this study was to compare the results of a modified Allen's test with digit pressure change during radial artery compression for assessing collateral circulation before radial artery harvest.

Methods:
One hundred twenty-nine consecutive patients were studied before coronary artery bypass operations. A modified Allen's test was performed with Doppler ultrasound to assess blood flow in the superficial palmar arch before and during radial artery compression. A decreased audible Doppler signal after radial artery compression was considered a positive modified Allen's test. First and second digit pressures were measured before and during radial artery compression. A decrease in digit pressure of 40 mm Hg or more (digit P) with radial artery compression was considered positive.

Results:
Seven of 14 dominant extremities (50%) and 8 of the 16 nondominant extremities (50%) with a positive modified Allen's test had a digit P of less than 40 mm Hg (false positive). Sixteen of 115 dominant extremities (14%) and 5 of 112 nondominant extremities (4%) with a negative Allen's test had a digit P of 40 mm Hg or more with radial artery compression (false negative).

Conclusion:
Use of the modified Allen's test for screening before radial artery harvest may unnecessarily exclude some patients from use of this conduit and may also place a number of patients at risk for digit ischemia from such harvest. Direct digit pressure measurement is a simple, objective method that may more precisely select patients for radial artery harvest. Additional studies are needed to define objective digital pressure criteria that will accurately predict patients at risk for hand ischemia after radial harvest.

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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Arthritis Hand Pain Relief: Infrared Heat Therapy Ergonomic Computer Workstation



ValueRays® ergonomic computer accessories provide infrared heat therapy using infrared heaters in the comfort of your home or office. If your hand pain diagnosis results in cold computer hands and numb cold fingers, cost-effective and energy-efficient infrared heat therapy using your computer provides warmth and relief.

(PRWEB) April 12, 2009 -- IGMproducts.com announced today the availability of infrared heated computer accessories to help those who suffer with arthritis hand pain to use the computer with improved comfort and relief.

"Infrared heat is a deep penetrating source of heat therapy for computer users who have arthritis in their hands," said Anna Miller, IGMproducts.com owner. "I have arthritis in my hands, and only 20-30 minutes of infrared heat therapy daily makes a big difference in reduced hand pain and increased amount of time I can use the computer."

Infrared heat can make a difference for computer users with hand pain associated with arthritis and other conditions like carpal tunnel syndrome, Raynaud's Phenomenon, diabetes and poor circulation. The relaxing heat helps get blood circulating to the affected areas.

Not everyone has poor circulation or cold hand pain when using the computer, but for people who do, IGMproducts.com provides a high-quality, low-priced infrared heated mouse, heated mouse pad, heated keyboard pad and mouse hand warmer blanket.

IGMproducts.com is the premiere online store for ValueRays® USB Infrared Heat Ergonomic Computer Accessories. The ValueRays® brand includes the following USB items:

ValueRays® Warm Mouse
ValueRays® Warm Mouse Pad
ValueRays® Warm Keyboard Pad

ValueRays® Mouse Hand Warmer®

If you or someone you know suffer from hand pain when using the computer, infrared heat computer accessories are an ideal source of soothing heat to relax sore muscles, relieve tension and stress, and provide a deep penetrating source of heat to aching hands, fingers, wrists and arms.

Using USB heat is cost-effective and energy-efficient. The computer supplies therapeutic heat energy for the mouse hand and keyboard hands. The ValueRays® USB plug & play products require no additional software to install. Just place the USB connector in an USB port to start a home-based heat therapy treatment while you are using the computer. Within a few minutes warmth is delivered to the surface of the mouse pad and to the computer mouse. Use the two heated items inside the Mouse Hand Warmer® blanket pouch and insulated infrared heat creates the perfect mouse hand environment.

IGMproducts.com offers Free USA Shipping & No Sales Tax for its online shoppers.

April is Occupational Therapy Month. If you know someone recovering from a hand injury, suggest infrared heat ergonomic work aids to assist the rehabilitation process. See the IGMproducts.com ValueRays® advertisement in April's Conference issue of OT Practice Magazine.

If you have severe hand pain symptoms, severe cold computer hands and numb cold fingers, please consult a doctor to discuss cold hand causes for a proper hand pain diagnosis. Do not rely solely on Internet research to define the causes of cold hands and hand pain.

For more information about ValueRays® USB Infrared Heat Ergonomic Computer Accessories, please visit http://igmproducts.com/

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Monday, March 30, 2009

Simple Method Found To Warm Cold Hands

Seems to me, the simplest method to keep your cold hands warm while using the computer is with USB Heat Computer Accessories by ValueRays®. For more information about the value of using infrared heat, visit ValueRays.com, IGMproducts.com or Warm-Mouse-Heated-Keyboard.com




from New York Times


A simple and inexpensive method of training the body to change the way it reacts to cold has proven highly successful in curing victims of a little-known disease that cuts circulation to the hands in cold weather, according to a researcher for the Army.

Using hot water and an ice chest, victims of ailment, Raynaud's disease, can train their body to prevent a routine reaction that leads to restricted circulation to hands and feet as the body saves energy to cope with cold, Dr. Murray Hamlet of the Army's Research Institute of Environmental Medicine said last week.

The curtailment of blood flow is harmless to most people because the circulation will resume after about 10 minutes, Dr. Hamlet said. But Raynaud's victims do not regain circulation to their fingers, causing a painful condition that increases the risk of frostbite and in severe cases can force amputation, he said.

Raynaud's is primarily caused by cold but also can be brought on by emotional stress and by frequent use of vibrating machinery, such as jackhammers and chain saws. For victims whose conditions are prompted by cold, the treatment has proven virtually foolproof in eliminating the problem, Dr. Hamlet said. Condition's Cause Unknown

When the body is exposed to cold, the nervous system constricts blood flow to hands and feet to retain heat. When the temperature of the extremities reaches dangerously low levels, the nervous system in effect throws a switch that dilates blood vessels and restores full circulation, Dr. Hamlet said.

But Raynaud's sufferers do not regain circulation because blood vessels leading to their hands do not dilate as they should. Researchers have been unable to determine what causes the condition, Dr. Hamlet said.

It is unclear how many people have Raynaud's, which occurs predominantly among women, affecting perhaps as many as 10 percent of them, Dr. Hamlet said. Many victims are not aware they have the disease because they think their body's response to the cold is normal, he said.

A procedure originally devised a decade ago by an Army doctor at an laboratory in Alaska to treat the disease has been refined by reasearchers at the Army laboratories here and now is being used more and more by civilian physicians, Dr. Hamlet said. Warm and Cold Water

Three to six times a day, every other day, Raynaud's sufferers undergo a treatment in which they first sit indoors with their hands submerged in warm water and then are put in a cold environment, exposed to the cold except for their hands, which are submerged in an ice chest filled with warm water.

After 50 rounds of treatment, all of the 150 test subjects at the laboratories here were able to venture into the cold without losing circulation to their hands, he said.

''We just retrain those blood vessels to dilate rather than restrict in response to cold,'' Dr. Hamlet said. ''It works extremely well.'' He said the treatment may not work, however, for victims of Raynaud's who developed the disease as a result of other illnesses, such as high blood pressure, arterial disease, drug abuse and trauma.

Dr. David Trentham, medical director of rheumatology at Boston's Beth Israel Hospital, said the success rate of the treatment had not been shown independently of the Army data but that it appeared to work well.

''It's a very innovative and interesting approach and there is an abundance of evidence to indicate why it should work,'' he said. ''It hasn't been confirmed but I think that is largely because it is so new.''

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Sunday, March 15, 2009

How to Cure Your Low Thyroid Symptoms with Essential Oils

Cold Hands? Visit the Cold Hand Specialists at ValueRays.com




by Sarah Tomley

Even after you’ve been diagnosed with hypothyroidism or Hashimoto's, you may find yourself suffering fluctuations in how you feel – especially since even the foods you eat can affect how well your medicines can work

Which Essential Oils Should I Use?
Each essential oil has a unique quality and ability to soothe or stimulate different parts of the mind and body. You’ve probably got very used to noticing how your mind and body is reacting, to keep track of how well any medicines, such as thyroxine, are working. You can use the same information and awareness to choose an essential oil that will perfectly suit your needs.

There are lots of ways to use essential oils: you can use them in the bath, mix them with carrirer oils for massage or on compresses, or diffuse them into the air, by heating them in a burner.

Myrtle (Myrtus communis) Myrtle is said to help normalize hormonal imbalances of the thyroid and ovaries and support immune function. It is considered to be the most useful oil of all in treating hypothyroidism.

Fennel (Foeniculum Vulgare Dulce) This oil and herb helps the adrenals, which is important as many people with hypothyroidism or Hashimoto’s also suffer from adrenal deficiency. It is also said to balance the pituitary and thyroid – the critical glands for regulating the thyroid.

Lavender (Lavandula Augustifolia/Officinalis/Dentata) This has anti-viral, and anti-inflammatory properties. If your thyroid becomes inflamed, try mixing some Lavender oil with hot water, and dipping a flannel into the water. Press the warm flannel gently over your neck as a compress, preferably while lying down. Do this twice a day, or whenever you feel your thyroid needs calming.

Spearmint (Mentha spicata) This oil helps support the respiratory, nervous, and glandular systems. It is said to have a hormone-like activity, and is antispasmodic, so may also help with cramps. It is something of a star performer, as it is also anti-infectious, antiparasitic, antiseptic, and anti-inflammatory – so may be particularly useful for people with Hashimoto’s disease.

Nutmeg (Myristica fragrans) This oil (and spice) helps support the adrenal glands – so is good for those who suffer from adrenal deficiency. The oil stimulates circulation, which should help with cold hands and feet, and helps with digestive problems such as indigestion and flatulence.

Pine (Pinus Pinaster/Sylvestris) This oil acts on the hormones, having a cortisone-like effect. Since the body needs adequate stores of its own cortisol hormone in order to use thyroxine successfully, this oil might be worth trying if you’re still feeling very tired while on medication.

German Chamomile (Matricaria Recutita) Chamomile can improve hair growth and condition, soothe inflamed joints, lessen insomnia, dispel migraines, and generally de-stress the body and mind.

Geranium (Pelargonium Graveolens) Geranium oil works strongly to help balance hormones, and is also a relaxant (good for cramps), anti-inflammatory (good for those with Hashimoto’s), and stimulates the liver and pancreas. Since the liver does a lot of the good work in converting T4 hormone into T3 – vital for those on thyroxine – this is a big bonus.

Sandalwood (Santalum Spicatum/Album) This oil stimulates the pineal and pituitary glands to enhance meditiation and calm stress. It is also thought to help balance the metabolism, which is the hypothyroid patient’s ultimate goal.

Tansy (Tanacetum Vulgare) This oil is an anti-inflammatory and it also improves circulation, which is great for treating those cold hands and feet. It is also said to cleanse the lymphatic system, which is important for those with Hashimoto’s. Use the oil or the herb in teas and cooking.

Sage (Salvia Officinalis) This essential oil works wonders on the mind, helping to relieve depression and lift any sense of mental fatigue.

Vetiver (Vetiveria Zizaniodes) This oil has a deliciously fresh smell, and has powerful anti-spasmodic and anti-inflammatory properties. Interestingly, it has “warming” properties too, so should help with the low body temperature so common to people with hypothyroidism.

Basil (Ocimum Basilicum) This oil is an anti-inflammatory that can also help with intestinal problems, muscle spasms, headaches, and mental fatigue.
Clove (Syzgium Aromaticum) This oil is renowned for improving the memory (as well as famously soothing tooth pain).

Dill (Anethum Graveolens) This oil and herb helps to lower glucose levels, which can be a problem for people with thyroid conditions. It is also said to help with liver deficiencies, which can be a cause of ineffective conversion of the T4 to T3 hormones in the body.

Marjoram (Thymus Mastichina) This plant is useful as a herb and oil for releasing muscles and blood vessels – it works brilliantly for shifting very stubborn headaches (press a marjoram compress against the back of your neck) and for relieving bad cramps. It also helps to ease insomnia and bring restful sleep.

Warning! Use your Oils Safely
Always consult your doctor before using any oils, especially if you are on thyroxine medication or are pregnant.

The only essential oils that can safely be used in neat form, and small amounts, are Lavender and Tea Tree. Do not be tempted to use any other essential oil without diluting it: these are strong substances that can cause severe effects if used incorrectly.

If you accidentally get any mix of essential oils in your eyes, put a few drops of pure vegetable oil in the eyes to dilute it and “wash” it out. Do not use water.

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Need a cozy blanket for your cold hands?



Free Mouse Hand Warmer blanket giveaway is happening now at Everything Up Close! To enter the contest, visit Everything Up Close and read the instructions. A mouse hand warmer is a cozy blanket pouch to hold your favorite heated mouse and warm mouse pad. The three items when used together create an ultimate warm mouse hand environment. It's a designer mouse house!Visit Everything Up Close today!

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Monday, February 9, 2009

Are you Having Cold Hands and Feet?

Sorry toes!





from Natural Home Remedies

Hands and feet feel cold when they don’t receive an ample supply of warm blood containing oxygen and nutrients. The most common reason for this problem is exposure to cold air, especially from a draught or the wind. An underlying health problem may be responsible, but whatever the cause of the condition, there is much you can do to relieve the symptoms.

Although cold extremities can be uncomfortable or even painful, the problem is usually relatively minor. When you are inadequately protected from the cold- especially if you also smoke or feel tired, faint or anxious – your peripheral arteries become narrower. This narrowing restricts the circulation of warm blood to your hands and feet with the purpose of keeping the rest of your body warm.

Cold extremities can also result from hormone fluctuations before menstruation or a lack of circulating nutrients, as when a person is on a very strict diet or is suffering from an eating disorder. In addition, they may occur during the incubation period before an infection. Other causes include Raynaud’s syndrome and circulatory problems associated with such conditions as chronic bronchitis and arterial disease. Prolonged restriction of the blood supply to the hands and feet may lead to chilblains – shiny red or purple lumps on the fingers or toes that can be painful and itchy.

Cold hands and feet and the development of chilblains can be prevented in four simple ways. Dress warmly in cold weather. Stop or reduce smoking. Get exercise that raises your pulse rate for about 20 minutes every day. Eat regular, nutritious meals to fuel your body so that it raises metabolism, creating heat. Smaller, frequent meals are better than one or two large meals a day.

Massage with stimulating aromatherapy essential oils can boost the circulation in hands and feet. Mix three drops each of rosemary and black pepper oils into a tablespoon of warm sweet almond or olive oil, and massage your hands, arms, feet and calves with the mixture. Use a firm stroke as you sweep your hand up your leg or arm, and a lighter one as you sweep back down towards your hand or foot.

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Sunday, February 8, 2009

Very cold hands, very warm hearts!

Keep your hands warm with ValueRays Infrared Heat Warm Mouse and Warm Mouse Pad.


juliechatterbox


Caught in the frigid fingers of winter’s chill, I find myself burrowing under the covers to warm the aching bones. I sneak a hand out to reach the phone, remote control or the laptop perched next to my pillow and I’m so much luckier than those who are shoveling and chopping their way out every day to go to work or school. I’m thankful for the chance to wait out most of Mother Nature’s fury from the comfort of my room.

I did venture out the other day to go to a free movie at the school with my nieces and while it wasn’t snowing, the ice and accumulation makes it really difficult to get around with the walker. I watched the evening news yesterday and saw a young man trying to roll his wheelchair several blocks from the city bus to his destination. The sidewalks are buried and he was forced to maneuver in the street full of inches of slush and ice. My heart ached for him because I know how challenging getting around in a wheelchair can be when you are flying solo. I don’t face a fraction of the challenges that he does but I can empathize with him and every other person who tries to stay upright in the ice and snow without full mobility and agility. Of course, he’s a Buffalo boy and we grow ‘em tough! I pray he’ll have much easier going for the rest of the winter. It was one of those gentle reminders that no matter how tough I may find my life on any given day, there are people everywhere with much greater problems.

Locally, a plow driver on his way home saw a car stuck in a drift and saw smoke coming out from under the hood. He and another passer-by managed to pull a 96 year-old man from the driver’s seat before the engine fire fully engulfed the car. Talk about being in the right place at the right time! Those helpers didn’t care how bitter cold and nasty it was- they responded instinctively and bravely.

Sadly, a 42 year old man who was hit by a snowplow last week passed away. He was walking to a work site before 5 a.m. to check in for daily work. The plow driver left the scene and when the police caught up with him he was charged with being drunk; such a tragedy. But, out of misery comes goodness, and his family donated his organs to help others get another chance at life as a tribute to the kind and loving person they grieve for.

The whole point of this is that even in the coldest, darkest places there are rays of light. The best in mankind comes out in the worst of conditions. Whether it is someone shoveling snow or running errands for an elderly neighbor, or emergency responders braving the elements in emergencies, we as a people are strengthened by adversity.

Yes, it’s pretty cold out there but our humanity keeps us warm inside!

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Saturday, February 7, 2009

Neuropathy, A Diabetic Side Effect: How to Decrease or Eliminate This Problem

ValueRays Computer Accessories with Infrared Heat relieve pain associated with hand numbness. Click Here for more details.



by: Bob Held
from e-healtharticles.com

One diabetic side effect is neuropathy. This is a condition where the nerves of the body are damaged. It is called "Diabetic Peripheral (referring to the outer part of the body) Neuropathy". This type of neuropathy affects the feet and legs, hands and arms, and it can occur on both sides of the body. In fact, 40 percent of type 2 diabetics experience Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy.

Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy shows up as one or more of the following symptoms:

* Tingling and numbness in the toes, fingers, or legs.
* Feeling cold, pain or burning feet, hands or legs.
* Extreme sensitivity to touch, even a light touch.
* Sharp pains or cramps.
* Loss of balance and coordination.

These symptoms are often worse at night.

Causes of nerve damage

Higher than normal sugar levels in the body cause the outer sheathing (protective covering) of nerve cells to degenerate. This is similar to an electrical wire that is covered with insulation, and the insulation is beginning to crumble. Without insulation the unprotected wire will start short-circuiting.

In the same way, when the sheathing of nerve cells degenerate, the signals being transmitted are scrambled, resulting in your body receiving signals that are interpreted as numbness, heat, cold, tingling, pain, etc.

What can be done about it?

It has been known for some time that increased levels of Tiamine (vitamin B1) in the blood stream are very effective in reducing and reversing diabetic neuropathy. Unfortunately, the oral intake of vitamin B1 does not greatly increase the levels of B1 in the blood stream. Previously, the way that blood stream levels of B1 were increased was through periodic intravenous feeding or through injections every few weeks.

The reason that methods like this had to be used is that Tiamine (sometimes spelled Thiamine), like all of the B vitamins, is water-soluble. It cannot be stored in the body and flushes out within 4 to 5 hours. Oral intake of Tiamine over 5 mg results in greatly reduced bioavailability and immediate flushing from the body (this is why urine frequently turns yellow when taking larger doses of B vitamins).

Now, a new type of vitamin B1 has been produced, called Benfotiamine. It is a fat-soluble version of vitamin B1. What this means is that this new form of vitamin B1 can be taken orally in large dosages and it will not flush out of the body the way ordinary Tiamine (vitamin B1) does.

The result is that the blood stream levels of vitamin B1 can now be greatly increased, enabling a rapid and effective decrease or elimination of the symptoms of Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy.

Many of our diabetics now using Benfotiamine report a lessening of their neuropathy symptoms within 4 to 7 days, and Benfotiamine has been shown to be non-toxic and without any side effects even in very high dosages.

You can start using Benfotiamine and decrease or eliminate these problems!


Bob Held is the Founder and President of the Wellness Support Network. The Wellness Support Network has a peripheral neuropathy treatment for nerve damage remedy handling the causes of nerve damage. The company's products also address high blood pressure and the diabetic condition itself.




Labels: Cold Hands, Numb Hands, Poor Circulation.


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Monday, February 2, 2009

Cold hands from Stanford Wellsphere

Photo Courtesy of Visual DX Health. Chronic cold purple fingers due to Raynaud's Penomenon

Cold hands. If your fingers turn white and start to hurt when you're out in the cold, you may have a condition called Raynaud's phenomenon. On exposing your fingers to cold, the blood vessels close, skin turns white and their temperature drops. When the temperature drops to 59 degrees, your body tries to save your skin by opening the blood vessels and the skin turns red and starts to itch and burn. If you warm your hands at this point, your skin will not be damaged, but if you do not get out of the cold, the blood vessels in your hands can close and the temperature in your hands can drop to freezing, resulting in frostbite.

People who have Raynaud's phenomenon have blood vessels in their hands that do not open when the skin temperature reaches 59 degrees. Several diseases, smoking and using vibrating equipment can cause Raynaud's phenomenon.

Wear two or more layers of gloves and mittens. When your fingers feel cold, swing your arms very rapidly about your shoulder with your elbow straight. This will drive blood, like a centrifuge, into your fingers and warm them. The blood pressure drugs called calcium channel blockers, such as Nifidipine, can help to treat and prevent Raynaud’s phenomenon ( Rheumatology, November 2005). Another option is nitroglycerin ointment that is used to treat angina. When applied to the forearm, it opens blood vessels leading to the hands. Check with your doctor to see if these prescription medications would be appropriate for you.
For additional support, click here.

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Cold Hands Mouse Hand Warmer Blanket Mouse Pad Giveaway

Mouse Hand Warmer Free Giveaway - cold mouse hand relief Mouse Hand Warmer Free Giveaway - cold mouse hand reliefMouse Hand Warmer Free Giveaway - cold mouse hand relief

IGMproducts.com is sponsoring two giveaways in partnership with Grammy Janet's Place and Everything Up Close. Two USA winners will be announced soon. Enter to win.


PRLog (Press Release) – Jan 29, 2009 – Desert Hot Springs. A Mouse Hand Warmer giveaway is in progress now. Don't delay. Enter to win. Join the fun at GrammyJanetsPlace.blogspot.com for a mouse hand warmer mouse pad giveaway in progress now. The giveaway announcement blog post was made by Grammy Janet on January 28, 2009. The giveaway ends February 6, 2009. Visit GrammyJanetsPlace.blogspot.com and scroll the page until you see the Mouse Hand Warmer Mouse Pad Blanket Giveaway. Follow the instructions, and enter a comment to win.

The Mouse Hand Warmer second giveaway is scheduled for February 9 - 18, 2009 at EverythingUpClose.blogspot.com. Mark your calendar to enter this giveaway on February 9th. On February 9, 2009, visit EverythingUpClose.blogspot.com for instructions to enter the Mouse Hand Warmer giveaway. Everything Up Close features new product reviews and giveaways every week.

The Mouse Hand Warmer mouse pad blanket pouch was designed to create the ultimate mouse hand environment. It helps relieve the pain caused by a cold, exposed mouse hand. It's a warm, fleece, cozy blanket pouch used to hold your favorite mouse and mouse pad (optional). If you or someone you know complains of a cold mouse hand, IGMproducts.com has warming products to address the problem.

IGMproducts.com offers its shoppers free USA shipping and no sales tax worldwide. They support the Arthritis, Raynaud's and Diabetes Associations. IGMproducts' warming devices relieve cold hand pain, relieve stress and tension of the hand and wrist experienced by computer users.

The Mouse Hand Warmer was recently seen in PC Magazine, Delight Magazine, Coolest Gadgets and many other popular websites. To read more about the Mouse Hand Warmer products, visit IGMproducts.com.

Now, don't delay, visit Grammy Janet's Place now to enter the free giveaway event.

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Grammy warms cold hands giveaway today!



Do you have a cold mouse hand? Do you know someone who sits at the computer all day? Cool drafts, chilly work spaces and some medical conditions like poor circulation and arthritis cause a person's hands to get cold.

Beginning January 27th and ending February 6th, Grammy Janet's Place blog is sponsoring a free giveaway for a Mouse Hand Warmer - Designer Mouse House. It creates the perfect mouse hand environment. Join the Bloggy Giveaway Carnival event featured now at Grammy Janet's.

For more details and to read the entrance instructions, please click here.

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Monday, January 26, 2009

High blood pressure and cold hands



If you suffer with cold hands, there are a number of medical conditions as the root or basis of the cold hand reaction. When we sit for long hours at the computer using a computer mouse, our hands get cold. This blog defines a variety of cold hand causes and things we can do to address cold hands. Click here for more help.

from BMJ Group

If you have high blood pressure you probably won't feel ill. But having high blood pressure increases your risk of health problems, including heart attacks and strokes. There are good treatments, and things you can do yourself, to reduce your blood pressure.

What is high blood pressure?
When doctors take your blood pressure, they measure how hard your blood pushes against your blood vessels as it moves around your body. You need some pressure to keep the blood moving. But if the pressure is too high, over time it can damage your blood vessels. This can cause problems such as heart attacks, strokes and kidney damage. Your blood pressure may rise and fall slightly throughout the day and night. But when it stays up, it's called high blood pressure. Your doctor may call high blood pressure hypertension.

Doctors measure blood pressure with two numbers. The first number measures your blood pressure when your heart beats. The second number measures your blood pressure when your heart relaxes and fills with blood. Your doctor may describe your blood pressure using these two readings as, for example, '140 over 90'. Usually, your doctor will say you have high blood pressure if either your first blood pressure reading is 140 or higher or your second blood pressure reading is 90 or higher.

You are more likely to have high blood pressure if you are older, have a relative with high blood pressure, are pregnant, are overweight, don't exercise, smoke, have an unhealthy diet or are under a lot of stress.

British people of black African or Caribbean origin, or South Asian (Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi) origin are more likely to have high blood pressure than other British people. They are also more likely to have strokes and heart attacks.

What are the symptoms?
Most people with high blood pressure don't get any symptoms. You can't feel when your blood pressure goes up, although some people with high blood pressure say they had bad headaches before they were treated. The only way to find out if your blood pressure is high is to have it measured.

Your doctor will measure your blood pressure using an inflatable cuff that goes around your upper arm. You'll probably need to have it measured several times to make sure it's not just a one-off high reading. You should also have it measured in both arms.

What treatments work?
You may be able to reduce your blood pressure by making changes to your lifestyle. But if you need to take medicines to control your blood pressure, you'll probably need more than one type.

Your doctor will try to reduce your blood pressure to 140 over 85 (140/85) or less. If you have diabetes, problems with your kidneys, or have had a heart attack or a stroke, your doctor will aim to bring your blood pressure down slightly further, to 130 over 80 (130/80) or less.

Medicines
There are many different types of medicines that can lower your blood pressure. Most of them work about as well as each other. You may need to take more than one medicine to bring your blood pressure down to a healthy level. Talk to your doctor about which medicines may be best for you to try first. This will depend on lots of things, including whether you have any other medical conditions.

We've listed the main types of medicine (with some examples of their brand names).

ACE inhibitors: captopril (Capoten), enalapril (Innovace) and perindopril (Coversyl). Alpha-blockers: doxazosin (Cardura), prazosin (Hypovase) and terazosin (Hytrin). Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs): candesartan (Amias), losartan (Cozaar) and valsartan (Diovan). Beta-blockers: atenolol (Tenormin), metoprolol (Lopresor) and propranolol (Inderal). Calcium channel blockers: nifedipine (Adalat), amlodipine (Istin), diltiazem (Calcicard) and verapamil (Cordilox). Diuretics: bendroflumethiazide (Aprinox), chlortalidone (Hygroton), and indapamide (Natrilix). Lots of research has shown that taking one or more of these medicines should reduce your risk of having a heart attack or a stroke, and help you to live longer. They all work in slightly different ways.

The latest research shows that beta-blockers may not work as well as ACE inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers, calcium channel blockers and diuretics. So doctors are told most people should try these other drugs first.

These are some of the more common side effects of the different medicines.

ACE inhibitors: a dry cough, dizziness (especially the first time you take them) and kidney problems. Alpha-blockers: fainting (especially the first time you take them), headaches and swollen ankles. ARBs: coughing, dizziness and sexual problems (such as not being able to get an erection). Beta-blockers: tiredness, nausea, sexual problems, cold hands and cold feet. People taking beta-blockers along with another drug called a diuretic may be more likely to get diabetes. Calcium channel blockers: headaches, dizziness, swollen ankles, flushing and abnormal heartbeat. Diuretics: dizziness, nausea, sexual problems, muscle cramps, thirst and needing to pass urine more often. You may need regular check-ups to make sure you aren't getting serious side effects, such as diabetes or high levels of potassium in your blood. Talk to your doctor if you are getting side effects. They may give you a different type of medicine, or a lower dose. Don't just stop taking the medicines without talking to your doctor.

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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Cold Hands and Feet from Diagnose Me

Cold extremities occur when blood vessels are constricted or slightly obstructed. This may be due to increased connective tissue tension around the blood vessels, which causes a reduction in the passage of blood through the skin. The hands or feet may change color, from pink through purple, orange, and blue even to white. As they warm up again, the color changes back again in reverse order, often accompanied by a feeling of throbbing or buzzing.

Please note that it is extremely important to obtain an accurate diagnosis before trying to find a cure. Many diseases and conditions share common symptoms: if you treat yourself for the wrong illness or a specific symptom of a complex disease, you may delay legitimate treatment of a serious underlying problem. In other words, the greatest danger in self-treatment may be self-diagnosis. If you do not know what you really have, you can not treat it!

Knowing how difficult it is to weed out misinformation and piece together countless facts in order to see the "big picture", we now provide simple online access to The Analyst™. Used by doctors and patients alike, The Analyst™ is a computerized diagnostic tool that sits on a vast accumulation of knowledge and research. By combining thousands of connections between signs, symptoms, risk factors, conditions and treatments, The Analyst™ will help to build an accurate picture of your current health status, the risks you are running and courses of action (including appropriate lab testing) that should be considered. Full information is available here.

Causes & Development
A lot of us have cold hands or feet and simply put up with it. For some people it can be a serious problem - especially if they get very cold. Some people wear mittens and heavy socks all year round, even in warm weather, indoors and out. Their hands and feet are always cold. A number of things cause this, such as:

Poor circulation due to coronary heart disease

Raynaud's disease (disorder that affects the flow of blood to the fingers and sometimes to the toes)

Frostbite

Working with vibrating equipment (like a jackhammer)

A side-effect of taking certain medications

An underlying disease affecting blood flow in the tiny blood vessels of the skin. (Women smokers may be prone to this).

Stress

Some people's blood vessels are hypersensitive to cold and tend to go into spasm, a condition known as Raynaud's Syndrome. This is most common in young women. The fingertips, then the fingers and even the whole hand become cold and go white. They go numb and have difficulty doing fine movements. Sometimes the feet are also affected. In the most extreme of circumstances where for some reason the blood supply to an area is restricted for a prolonged period of time frost bite or gangrene can occur.

Treatment & Prevention
If wearing gloves and wool socks and staying indoors where it's warm is a nuisance or doesn't help, try these other warm-up tips:

Don't smoke. It impairs circulation.

Avoid caffeine. It constricts blood vessels.

Avoid handling cold objects. Use ice tongs to pick up ice cubes, for instance.

With fingers outstretched, swing your arms in large circles, like a baseball pitcher warming up for a game. This may increase blood flow to the fingers. (Don't do this if you have bursitis or back problems!)

Do not wear footwear that is tight-fitting.

Wiggle your toes. It may help keep them warm as a result of increased blood flow.

Practice a relaxation technique, such as biofeedback.

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Raynaud's disease produces cold hands

Raynaud's Disease = Cold Hands
Does your mouse hand get cold? CLICK HERE
BMJ Publishing Group Limited

Raynaud's disease is an illness that can suddenly cut off the blood to parts of your body, usually your fingers and toes. This can be unpleasant, but it isn't usually serious.

We've looked at the best and most up-to-date research to produce this information. You can use it to talk to your doctor and decide which treatments are right for you.

What is Raynaud's disease?
If you have Raynaud's disease, your fingers, toes and other parts of your body suddenly become numb, white and cold.

These attacks happen because small blood vessels in your fingers and toes narrow and stop your blood flowing normally. Most people get attacks when the temperature is cold, but some people get attacks if they feel upset or stressed.

You don't have to get really cold for an attack to begin. People who have Raynaud's disease have very sensitive blood vessels. Just a small change in temperature can trigger an attack.

Nobody knows what causes Raynaud's disease for most people. But some people get Raynaud's disease because of another illness, including rheumatoid arthritis and an immune system illness called lupus. You can also get Raynaud's disease from certain medicines, including beta-blockers. People who work with vibrating tools, such as road diggers, also have a higher chance of getting Raynaud's disease. Your doctor will check to see if your Raynaud's disease is caused by any other conditions.

This information is about treating Raynaud's disease that is not connected to a more serious condition.

What are the symptoms?
Having Raynaud's disease is not the same as just having cold hands. During a Raynaud's attack some or all of your fingers or toes suddenly go white. This may also affect your ear lobes and nose (and more rarely your tongue and nipples). Your fingers will feel cold, may tingle and feel numb or painful.

Because your fingers aren't getting any oxygen, they may then turn blue. As the blood returns to your fingers, they turn very red and may throb and hurt. The attack can last for anything from a few minutes up to a few hours. It depends on how quickly your fingers get warm again.

Raynaud's disease can be unsettling and worrying, but it is usually not serious. The symptoms should disappear completely after each attack.

Some people get ulcers on their fingers and toes but this is rare. If your attacks are very bad and you get symptoms like ulcers, then a more serious medical problem may be causing the attacks and you should see your doctor straight away.

What treatments work?
If your symptoms are mild you won't need any treatment. Keeping warm is the best way to prevent attacks. Medicine can help prevent Raynaud's attacks, but it can cause side effects.

Things you can do for yourself
Keeping warm is the best thing you can do to prevent Raynaud's attacks. Don't just try and keep your hands and feet warm. You need to keep your whole body warm to stop your fingers and toes over-reacting to the cold. Here are a few ideas:

Wear layers of loose-fitting clothing Wear hats and gloves in cold weather Keep your feet dry Wear gloves or socks in bed during winter Use portable heating aids and chemical warmers for your hands and feet if you need to stay outside for a long time. Also, remember that air conditioning can make rooms very cool.

During an attack, warm your hands, feet or the affected part of your body by going indoors. You can use warm water to help warm up the affected part.

Doing the following things can also make it less likely that you'll get a Raynaud's attack:

Stopping smoking. The chemicals in tobacco may make your symptoms worse Exercising regularly. This is recommended by some doctors. We don't know how well it works, because there hasn't been any research Controlling stress. If you find that your attacks start when you are upset or stressed then you could try to avoid stressful situations, or learn to handle stress better. You may find a stress management course helpful. Medicines
There's some good research to show that a medicine called nifedipine (brand name Adalat) helps prevent Raynaud's attacks, or make them less severe. You may have half as many attacks if you use it.

But nifedipine causes side effects, such as heart flutter (palpitations), headaches, flushing and swollen ankles. People who have higher doses tend to get more side effects. In one study, between half and three-quarters of people taking it had side effects.

Three other medicines are sometimes used. They are similar to nifedipine, so might work in the same way. But there hasn't been any good-quality research to show they work for Raynaud's disease. They are amlodipine (Istin), diltiazem (Tildiem) and nicardipine (Cardene).

Other treatments
Doctors sometimes try other treatments to see if they can help with Raynaud's disease. Some studies show that these treatments may help some people but a lot more research needs to be done.

These medicines (and some brand names) include: inositol nicotinate (Hexopal), moxisylyte (Opilon), naftidrofuryl oxalate (Praxilene) and prazosin (Hypovase). You'll need a prescription for these medicines from your doctor.

What will happen to me?
For most people with Raynaud's disease, the attacks are just a minor but uncomfortable problem. One study has found that only about 1 in 10 people with Raynaud's have really bad, frequent attacks. Some research shows that just over 1 in 10 people who have Raynaud's are later found to have a more serious disorder.

If your symptoms are mild then you probably won't need to take medication. But you may need to have tests to see if having Raynaud's disease is linked to another condition.

© BMJ Publishing Group Limited ("BMJ Group") 2009

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Friday, January 23, 2009

Why does diabetes cause poor circulation?

Poor Circulation = Cold Hands
Click Here for HELP


Poor circulation is one of the most dangerous consequences of diabetes. People with type 2 diabetes have two to four times the risk of dying from heart disease or having a stroke compared to non-diabetics. More than half of the amputations done in the United States are a consequence of diabetes, and usually the need for an amputation occurs because of damage to the peripheralarteries (arteries to the legs). Poor circulation from artery damage also causes open skin sores and infections for people with diabetes.

Why does diabetes lead to artery damage? Part of the answer is that diabetes usually occurs in the company of other diseases that place the heart andarteries at risk. People with diabetes are more likely than other people to develop high blood pressure, obesity and high cholesterol.

When several heart- or artery-health risks occur together in one person, they present a powerful health threat and are known as the metabolic syndrome.

High levels of glucose (blood sugar) also contribute to artery damage for people with diabetes. This was confirmed by long-term health results for people who participated in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT). After nearly 1,200 patients participated in this trial for an average of more than six continuous years, experts followed the progress of these patients and monitored their health.

The trial had assigned some patients to keep strict glucose goals in mind, advising them to take three or four insulin injections daily. These patients had a higher average A1C (a measure of glucose control) during treatment compared with the other half of the patients in the study, most of whom usedone or two daily injections. In the 11 years since the study was discontinued, the "tight control" group and the "loose control" group drifted back together in terms of their sugar control, so that they returned to having essentially the same glucose average from one group to the other. Despite this, the group that had the long stretch of "tight control" has much healthier arteries. Over an average of about 17 years of monitoring, this group has had a 57 percent lower rate of heart attack, stroke, and death from heart disease. In other words, for every three events that have been experienced within the "tight control" group, the "loose control" grouphas had seven events.

Experts don't know why high glucose levels contribute to artery damage.

If you are aggressive in treating each risk factor from the metabolic syndrome and if you keep your blood sugar tightly controlled, you can greatly reduce your risk of heart attack and other problems caused by artery injury.

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The Cold Facts About Seriously Cold Hands

Click Here - Hand Warming Devices




Author: Karen Barrow
Medically Reviewed On: August 15, 2005
Published on: August 15, 2005


Cold hands and feet are a common occurrence, usually blamed on the frigid weather, not dressing warmly enough or poor circulation. In most cases, a pair of mittens and some heavy socks will make you feel toasty again. But at what point are cold hands a sign of more serious problems? Dr. Robert Spiera, director of vasculitis and scleroderma at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York explains Raynaud's syndrome, a surprisingly common condition that underlies many cases of cold feet.

What is Raynaud's syndrome?

Raynaud's syndrome is a condition where people develop spasms in the blood vessels going to the hands or feet. These spasms are most often precipitated by exposure to cold, but they can also be caused by stressful situations.

It is something that is fairly common, especially in young women. Some estimates will say that as many as 10 percent of women have Raynaud's phenomena.

What are the symptoms of Raynaud's?

The hands or feet turn colors. The most typical thing would be first turning a whitish color, possibly followed by a phase where the hands can become very bluish and then a very reddish phase at the end. This is called the "French tricolor" changes of Raynaud's: white, blue and red.

These color changes are a result of the alterations in blood flow to the extremities. [The white color is caused by a lack of blood. The blue to red color is a result of a rush of blood to the hands.]

Should you be concerned about Raynaud's syndrome if you often get cold hands?
Raynaud's symptoms can fall within a spectrum in terms of the severity of the disease. There are people who are cold-sensitive, and their hands might turn a little white or feel a little bit cold in the cold weather; that's actually a normal physiologic response. But when people have Raynaud's, it's a more striking change, where they can actually see the color changes.

Why do people with Raynaud's get cold hands and feet?

Raynaud's is based on a normal physiologic response. If somebody is exposed to cold, the normal physiologic response is for your body to maintain core body temperature and prevent heat loss through the extremities. So, the body would clamp down on the peripheral vessels to have the blood go to the vital organs to maintain warmth.

But in people with Raynaud's, this normal response is exaggerated. For example, frostbite wouldn't be considered Raynaud's, but it's caused by the same response. In people who have Raynaud's, something like frostbite might happen much more readily or be more pronounced when it happens.

What causes Raynaud's phenomena?

There are families that are predisposed to having Raynaud's phenomena, but the symptoms of Raynaud's are usually indicative of some other disease. There are some autoimmune or connective tissue diseases that cause a higher rate and more severe form of Raynaud's.

For example, Raynaud's occurs in almost everybody with scleroderma, a chronic connective tissue disease. So, while some people just have Raynaud's syndrome alone with mild symptoms when they get very cold, in people with scleroderma the Raynaud's can be so severe that they develop injury to the tips of their fingers from the lack of blood flow. It becomes such a profound lack of blood supply that they actually can get ulcerations on the fingertips or even autoamputation (detachment) of the digits. In these patients with scleroderma and Raynaud's, the changes to the blood vessels can be seen; there's a thickening of the blood vessels which causes less room for the blood to flow.

How is Raynaud's diagnosed?

Raynaud's is really a clinical description. The only way to diagnose Raynaud's is by getting a good history from the patient and asking them to describe what happens to their hands. If the patient says, "Doctor, on cold exposure or during a stressful situation, my hands turn white and maybe little bluish," it's really just that description that would allow the doctor to diagnose Raynaud's.

Sometimes we'll just see it happen right in front of us. A patient gets nervous as a new doctor walks into the room, or they're in a cold exam room, and it will precipitate Raynaud's, so the doctor can observe it there.

How is the severity of the symptoms determined?

The severity would be determined by how much it bothers the patient, and how much it interferes with their daily life. That really depends on the individual patient and daily demands.

For example, I had a young woman who was a surgical resident and would go into the cold operating room and have the symptoms of Raynaud's there. It really wasn't necessarily a more severe form of Raynaud's than maybe somebody else's, but it interfered with her life more.

I would say it's significant if people are developing attacks where the white phase lasts more than 15 minutes. That really raises a flag that it might be serious Raynaud's, because during that white phase the fingers are not getting blood. That person is probably at higher risk for actually having injury to the tissues in their fingers or feet (but more often fingers) from the Raynaud's. This prolonged white phase signals more serious Raynaud's, and also would make me delve more deeply into whether this might be Raynaud's in the context of a more serious autoimmune or connective tissue disease like scleroderma.

What other diseases are associated with Raynaud's phenomena?

We seem to find that patients with autoimmune diseases have a higher frequency of Raynaud's than the general population. Scleroderma has the strongest association. In phospholipid syndrome, a person has certain blood proteins that predispose them to sluggish blood flow or blood clots that may show up as Raynaud's. We also see Raynaud's in patients with lupus.

Is this often the first sign of a more serious autoimmune problem?

Well, it can be. But more often than not, it's not going to be representing an autoimmune problem. So if somebody calls me up and says, "You know, I just met this young woman and she has a ten-year history of Raynaud's, and it's not changing, " I don't even think I need to see that person as a rheumatologist. But if someone's Raynaud's has suddenly gotten much, much worse, or somebody is 30 and is developing new Raynaud's, it can be a sign of an underlying connective tissue disorder brewing.

But I would say the most common consultation is to a young person with new Raynaud's. Do they have another disease or not? More often than not, they don't. But on the other hand, it is fair to look at that as something that should be at least evaluated, at least by their internist, if they develop new Raynaud's.

What does treatment consist of?

Once Raynaud's is diagnosed, how it is treated depends on how much it's interfering with the patient's life. There are some people with Raynaud's phenomena where they notice it, but it doesn't particularly bother them. So, beyond reassuring myself that it is nothing more serious, maybe that person doesn't need any treatment at all.

If a person is uncomfortable with it, there are a few very basic things to do. Maintaining core body temperature warmth is important. People with Raynaud's intuitively recognize, "Gee, I'd better wear gloves more often," but it's not just wearing gloves, it's also keeping a sweater on to keep your core body temperature up.

There are also medications we sometimes use in people who have very bad Raynaud's, or when it is interfering with their quality of life. One class of drugs used is called calcium channel blockers, like Procardia (nifedipine) or Norvasc (amlodipine), and are usually used as high blood pressure medicines. For Raynaud's they dilate the blood vessels and improve circulation. It's important to note that these drugs are not going to completely eliminate Raynaud's, but if they were having ten episodes a week, maybe they'll have four episodes a week. The drugs will decrease the frequency and often the severity of attacks.

Avoiding smoking is probably the most important thing for people with Raynaud's to do. You can actually give somebody a cigarette and precipitate a Raynaud's episode. Smoking causes spasm of the blood vessels.

Do you need to see a rheumatologist for an accurate diagnosis?

I think most rheumatologists would be comfortable with evaluating Raynaud's, but a lot of internists would be very capable of dealing with new Raynaud's as well. I think as rheumatologists, we deal with it a lot, and we're very familiar about the other things we should be thinking about in the context of new Raynaud's.

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Cold Hands defined by Ithaca Education Faculty



by Nick Quarrier MHS PT OCS

Do you have cold hands much of the time? Especially before a performance? And even if the room is hot? If yes, you may be interested in this information.

Cold hands are a sign of an overactive autonomic nervous system. More specifically, the signs of an overactive sympathetic nervous system. Our emotional and physiological self are controlled by the autonomic nervous system - a system that increases and decreases our heart rate, breathing rate, etc. One group of nerves "speeds" us up and one group of nerves "slows" us down. These groups are known as the sympathetic nerves and parasympathetic nerves. When the sympathetic nerves are fired (stimulated) the heart rate increases and blood is shunted from our hands, feet, and abdomen to our large muscle groups such as thighs and hips. Many muscles tense during this stimulation. This is a primitive reflex response which prepares us to flee from a threatening situation. (remember in high school biology the fight or flight response?) The parasympathetics, when stimulated, slows the heart rate down, causing rest, relaxation, and eventually sleep. During parasympathetic stimulation blood flows throughout the body and into the abdomenal organs (to help digestion, etc).

We live in a world that causes a domination of sympathetic nervous system stimulation. Every time we drive in an automobile, more than likely our sympathetics are fired and our muscles tense as we maneuver through a threatening environment. On the job stress stimulates the sympathetics, athletic performance stimulates the sympathetics, and musical performance stimulates the sympathetics. If you feel stressed out much of the time, more than likely your sympathetics are firing. This constant firing of sympathetics can bias the body's muscles into a continuous state of contraction or increased tension. This tension is easily noticed in a piano player practicing a difficult and demanding score and is evident by the shoulders elevating and being held rigidly. As the blood is shunted from the hands there is a reduced amount of nutrients and oxygen available to feed those muscles that are wroking so hard to play the notes! And thus there is no wonder why soreness in the hands and forearms may develop!

One important factor in preventing a music related injury or in recovering from an injury is to make sure the muscles doing all the work are well fed with nutrients and oxygen. The sympathetic nervous system must be controled. Yes, we need the sympathetics to excite us and assist in us in many of our activities. But we must not let them rule and dominate our bodies. How can we control them?

One of the most effective ways to reduce the sympathetic nervous system firing and to increase the parasympathetic nervous system (to relax us and circulate more blood to distal muscles) is to deep breath. We have always heard, "relax, calm down, take a few deep breaths!" This is sort of true but not totally. By deep breathing (diaphragmatic breathing) a greater quantity of oxygen enters our lungs. And as a greater quantity of oxygen is inhaled, the breathing rate naturally slows down. As the rate slows down carbon dioxide released in exhalation slows down and accumulates in the lungs and in our blood stream. (remember, oxygen is inhaled, carbon dioxide and oxygen is exhaled). Well, as carbon dioxide builds up in our blood a pH change occurs in the blood. As the pH changes the chemical nature of the blood stimulates the parasympathetics to fire! And the heart rate slows, blood flows back to the hands and feet, and relaxation occurs. It is that simple!!! But! It takes a minimum of 10 minutes of deep breathing to get the pH in the blood to change! That is why, "take a few deep breaths" doesn't work to relax us.

So to help warm the hands, reduce tension in the shoulders, help prevent injury, practice deep breathing throughout the day. Deep breath in the car on the way to work, while at the desk, preparing to perform, while watching TV, etc., etc. It takes some practice, but is extremely rewarding and warming!

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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Cold Hands? An info-blog to get cold hands warm



Our hands get cold and it sends a chill to the rest of our body! Our fingers get numb and it hurts. We work all day with cold hands, and don't know what to do to or why our hands get cold. How many times have you heard someone say, "Feel my hands, they're freezing!"

We work at computers most of the day. We sit and create graphics, format images, write memos, design websites, process orders, etc. The list is endless. Many of us work in a warehouse and the temperatures are low. We sit at a desk under a ceiling fan in an air-conditioned office. All these situations cause our hands to get cold.

Many people suffer from medical conditions causing our hands to get cold. Poor circulation, carpal tunnel syndrome and arthritis are commonly known to produce cold hands. We live with it. We complain about it. Now, there's a resource to get information about ways to keep your cold hands warm. Welcome to the Cold Hands Blog.

This blog is interactive. Anyone can post a comment annonymously. Anyone can submit a link to enter on the sidebar. We welcome your participation, suggestions and comments.

Let's discover the in's and out's of cold hands and ways to keep our hands warm.

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