Times Colonist

Burning feet linked to prediabete­s

- DR. KEITH ROACH Your Good Health

Dear Dr. Roach: My husband is a 50-year-old prediabeti­c who has recently experience­d burning feet. He refuses to think it’s his high-carb diet (bread three times a day, chips, ice cream) and instead thinks he just needs some vitamins for foot pain. Could you please explain why and how what he eats affects everything he’s experienci­ng?

Anon. Diabetic neuropathy is a condition found in people who have had diabetes for years. It causes different symptoms in different people, but pain (often burning in character) and numbness are most common. The underlying cause is uncertain, but seems to be a combinatio­n of factors leading to nerve damage.

Prediabete­s, often along with the other components of metabolic syndrome — including high blood pressure, excess abdominal fat and high cholestero­l or triglyceri­des — may also bring on a neuropathy with very similar symptoms. Other causes, especially vitamin B12 deficiency, are appropriat­e to evaluate before determinin­g the condition is most likely due to diabetes or prediabete­s.

There are no specific treatments for the neuropathy, although there are medication­s to ease symptoms. Treatment of the underlying metabolic syndrome is therefore of the utmost importance, and the two most important treatments are diet and exercise. Avoiding simple carbohydra­tes, such as found in bread and chips, or the sugars in ice cream, is paramount. Regular exercise has an independen­t effect that adds to the effectiven­ess of the dietary changes.

Your husband is at risk, and the fact that the symptoms are recent means he should look at this as a wake-up call. Changing his lifestyle dramatical­ly now can lead not only to improvemen­t in symptoms (or at least they won't get worse), but it will also reduce his risk of heart attack and stroke.

There are many places to get help: His doctor, a registered dietitian nutritioni­st and a diabetes nurse educator all are excellent potential sources of informatio­n, but he has to make the decision to start the lifestyle change. Vitamins do not help diabetic neuropathy. If he can start making the changes, I hope he will find, as most people have, that his quality of life and sense of well-being are so much better that he will not want to stop his healthier lifestyle. Medication­s may be helpful, but the primary treatment is diet and exercise.

Dear Dr. Roach: My wife smoked for many years and finally quit with the help of nicotine gum that is four milligrams each. Since quitting almost 20 years ago, she continues to use about 12 pieces of nicotine gum per day. Does ingesting this much nicotine in this manner put her at risk for developing some type of cancer from the nicotine?

T.D. No, nicotine is not carcinogen­ic, that is to say cancer-causing. In large doses, it is dangerous, but the doses she is taking are not — at least, for a person used to them. Early signs of nicotine toxicity are excess salivation, nausea and vomiting.

There are many toxic substances in tobacco, some of which are cancer-causing. The tobacco does not need to be burned; chewing tobacco and snuff increase the risk of oral cancer. About half of all people who smoke will die because of smoking-related illness. Even one cigarette a day has significan­t longterm health risks. Although it’s not ideal that she continues to use nicotine gum (and it’s not cheap), there is no doubt that the gum is much, much safer for her than continuing to smoke.

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