Hi,
I was wondering if someone could explain
the symptoms of gout to me. My husband
woke up the other day and screamed as he
got out of bed. he said it felt like his
foot was broken. He said it hurt him to
walk. Well he went to work that day, and
someone there told him he may have gout.
i don't know anything about it so I was
wondering if someone could explain it to
me.
What are the symptoms?
How do you get it?
Who normally gets it?
What age group - or does it not matter?
What can you do for it?
Thanks to anyone who responds to this.
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JYY2
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 05 Jun 2004 Posts: 230
Posted: 02-22-07 10:31am
If your husband has gout, the sooner he
takes the gout medicine the better.
"Emergency gout treatment" section of http://www.ICuredMyGout.org
describes what to do in case of a gout
attack. Good luck.
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*star*
Moderator
Joined: 12 Dec 2006 Posts: 1807 Location: ,
Thanks: 22
Thanked:24
Posted: 02-22-07 12:10pm
Thank you, but I don't know if he has it.
I started this topic to get some
information to decide if he has the
symptoms or not.
Can you please tell me what the symptoms
are?
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critical care RN
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 20 Feb 2007 Posts: 92
Posted: 02-22-07 12:30pm
Star; We see a lot of fist time gout
sufforers in our ER. This is there
complaints. The classic picture is of
excruciating and sudden pain, swelling,
redness, warmness and stiffness in the
joint. Low-grade fever may also be
present. The patient usually suffers from
two sources of pain. The crystals inside
the joint cause intense pain whenever the
affected area is moved. The inflammation
of the tissues around the joint also
causes the skin to be swollen, tender and
sore if it is even slightly touched. For
example, a blanket draping over the
affected area could cause extreme pain.
hope this is the info you were looking
for.
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JYY2
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 05 Jun 2004 Posts: 230
Posted: 02-22-07 13:58pm
------------------------------------------
------
RE: *star*'s "... what the symptoms (of
gout) are?"
------------------------------------------
------
*** The short answer is: "... sudden
and rapid development of inflammation,
swelling, warmth, shiny red or purple
stretched skin, extreme tenderness and
intense and excruciating pain in the
afflicted area. It also causes malaise,
fever, chills, increased heart rate, and
high blood pressure. Gout attacks often
occur in these areas: big toes and the
joints in feet, ankles, knees, hands,
wrists, arms, elbows, and bursas, the
ligaments and tendons around these joints;
and, in rare cases, shoulders, necks, hips
and spine. Gout can attack one or more
sites at a time, but the attack sites on
either side of the body are usually
asymmetrical. Gout attacks occur most
often between midnight to 2 a.m., and more
frequent in spring than other seasons ..."
-- more in Section 2 of http://www.icuredmygout.org.
*** On "Diagnosis of Gout is Not an
Exact Science" -- see paragraph 3.7 of the
above link.
Your husband is showing classic gout
symptoms - goes to bed with no injury,
feeling fine; wakes up with excrutiating
pain and inflammation, usually in the
foot.
Gout is not a contagious disease. It
develops when the cells in the body
generate uric acid in the blood faster
than the kidneys and intestinal bacteria
can dispose of it. When too much uric acid
accumulates in the blood, the excess is
dumped out by the formation of crystals of
monosodium urate into the body's
connective tissues. When these crystals
lodge in a joint, they cause an
inflammatory response that leads to the
pain and inflammation of gout.
The typical profile of a person who first
gets a gout attack is middle-aged
overweight male, but there are many
sufferers who don't fit this profile.
Women can get gout too, most commonly
after menopause.
For your husband's immediate relief,
follow the advice that others have posted
in response to your questions. But you and
your husband should be more concerned that
his gout most likely results from sleep
apnea, which is the cessation of his
breathing many times throughout the night
for many seconds at a time. The breathing
periods are usually accompanied by
snoring, but not always. Sleep apnea
causes gout because the lack of oxygen
causes the cells to overproduce uric acid
in the blood. It also makes the blood more
acidic so that it more readily dumps out
uric acid to keep its acidity constant.
There are very, very few doctors who
recognize the connection of gout and sleep
apnea. Those who do know that almost
everyone with gout also has sleep apnea.
The typical profiles are both the same.
Long-term sleep apnea can have
consequences that are much more serious
than gout, even life-threatening. You and
your husband will have to be very
insistent to get his doctor to check him
for sleep apnea. The medical journal
references on my website
<www.freewebs.com/goutcure> may help
convince the doc to do it. The connection
of gout to sleep apnea is a topic which
receives major attention in my book about
the perils of sleep apnea, which will be
published in just a few weeks.
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*star*
Moderator
Joined: 12 Dec 2006 Posts: 1807 Location: ,
Thanks: 22
Thanked:24
Posted: 02-22-07 14:39pm
critical care RN
wrote:
Star; We see a lot of fist
time gout sufforers in our ER. This is
there complaints. The classic picture is
of excruciating and sudden pain, swelling,
redness, warmness and stiffness in the
joint. Low-grade fever may also be
present. The patient usually suffers from
two sources of pain. The crystals inside
the joint cause intense pain whenever the
affected area is moved. The inflammation
of the tissues around the joint also
causes the skin to be swollen, tender and
sore if it is even slightly touched. For
example, a blanket draping over the
affected area could cause extreme pain.
hope this is the info you were looking
for.
Thank you all for your responses. You say
that if it is slightly touched it will
hurt. Well he was in pain for a while,
but he put on his boots and went to work
as normal. He was told at work that it is
also caused by eating seafood. Is this
true?
Also how long does the pain usually last?
he woke up on monday with the pain, and it
has almost gone away...(I think, I haven't
asked him in a couple days)
And is there anything that I can get him
over the counter that will help him to
relive the acid buildup?
Thanks
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critical care RN
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 20 Feb 2007 Posts: 92
Posted: 02-22-07 15:48pm
Star; this may not be gout. Can you be
more specific where his pain was? Under
part of his foot in the arch? Could be
plantarfascitis. Especially if the pain
went away shortly after getting out of bed
and wolking around. If this is the case I
can help you with this as well. PM me and
I'll inform you more.
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Haresh
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 17 Aug 2007 Posts: 15 Location: ,
Posted: 10-27-07 12:59pm
i had first attacks on right bigtoe. (
red, inflamation, un-bearable pain, even a
touch of fan air can not be tolerated)
my case it was first mistaken for injury
at that time. After an x-ray it was
reduced.
thereafter at appeared again and again at
a rough frequency of 4/5 months.
in development the frequency reduced and
duration increased.
it change places i.e. some time right toe,
some time left toe. later either ankles,
then knees, elbows, fingers and so.
in general only one joint attacked at
once.
only one instance, my both knees were
attacked at a time.
any mild injury can activate gout for a
gout patient.
many times it activates it self i.e.
without any reason.
it can appear within ten minutes also and
become severe-unbearable.
it can prolonged for weeks and reduces
very slowly.
in general it is said the a person with a
lot of weight, eating non-veg food, taking
alcohol, doing less excercise, taking less
water is prone to this desease. Increase
of uric acid crystal in blood is inviting
gouty attacks. It is said to be a
malfunction of kidneys or a metabolism
disorder.
Normally it appears in Men and after 50
years. My case, 1st attack was when i was
30years old. It is heard that even at the
age of 20 this can appear.
Prevention in may case was started taking
a lot of water and good sweating excercise
every day. In case of a severe attack, use
pain killer medicines.