The symptoms are
continuous burning pain in areas of the face, tongue, mouth, hands
and feet. The pain is due to inflamed nerves (neuritis) which occur
frequently in diabetes especially when it is poorly controlled.
Good control of diabetes by
eating the right diet, frequent monitoring of your blood sugar and taking your
medications as scheduled. Chromium picolinate is a natural co-factor for insulin
that is available as a herbal supplement. It makes insulin more effective in
metabolizing sugar into energy and thus enables better control of your blood
sugar.
Take pain relievers, such as
Tylenol. A new ointment called Zostrix (Capsaicin) may also help painful areas
by decreasing the amount of substance P that sends pain signals to the brain.
Zostrix is the burning ingredient in red-hot chili peppers. The ointment itself
may give you a funny burning sensation that lasts the initial couple of days.
Wear rubber gloves when you apply it and keep it out of your eyes. Specially
compounded ointments containing the medication combination
gabapentin/DMSO/clonidine/ketoprofen may help relieve the burning pain. Local
treatment with DMSO ointment promotes healing in diabetic ulcers. DMSO is a free
radical scavenger. Oxygen derived free radicals or neuropeptides are responsible
for the breakdown of our bodies, including the joints, skin and organs. Aging,
joint, muscle and tissue inflammation, plus poor functioning of the circulatory
system, nervous system and immune system often result from free radical damage.
A herbal pill that is a free radical scavenger is pycnogenol, which is an
extract of the pine bark.
The active ingredients are also found in grape seed extract.
Pycnogenol is 50 times more potent as a free radical remover (scavenger) than
Vitamin E and 20 times more powerful than Vitamin C. Your doctor may need to
examine you and make sure your diabetes is under control. Your doctor may
prescribe the blood thinner medication Trental (pentoxifylline). Trental used
alone is effective in most diabetics in relieving the burning and numbing pain.
Doctors sometimes prescribe strong anti-inflammatory drugs such as Tolectin or
strong painkillers such as Vicodin ES or Norco 10/325, which may be given for
short periods. The strong painkillers should be used carefully so that they do
not produce drug dependency. Antidepressants like Paxil, Elavil, St. John's Wort
help ease the burning pain. They work by blocking pain messages traveling
through the spinal cord and may act directly on injured nerves, stopping painful
spasms or decreasing their sensitivity. These pain-relieving actions are
separate from their mood-lifting effects. Anesthetic ointments such as Lidocaine
or an anti-itch cream called Zonalon (Doxepin) may be used to numb the area of
pain. Anticonvulsant medication e.g. Tegretol, Dilantin or Neurontin may be
added to help prevent and treat the pain. Take the medications regularly. Some
of these medications may decrease the production of blood cells so your
physician may have to check your blood every few weeks. Occasionally some of
these medications may produce a skin rash. Acupuncture, hypnosis, electrical
nerve stimulation and psychotherapy are helpful in some people.
Call your Doctor
if your pain is severe or you have difficulty controlling your
diabetes.