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Livedoid vasculopathy

Blood Cancers & Disorders | Last Active: 8 hours ago | Replies (267)

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@kawalker

Thanks for the post. I will suggest my husband gets uric acid tested. Anecdotally, his reaction to high purine food (red meat, haddock for example) is very pronounced- pain at the site of ulcer under 1 hr after consumption; redness to periwound. An inflammation response that then peels. I can get it under control with betaderm 2 application in 24hours. But if one has large ulcers, wound management mantra is to consume protein to repair understandably. But patients need to be warned not to consume purine high protein sources if high uric acid concentrations help trip up platelet clotting in LV. It would make for a great Mayo Clinic Study for a diet challenge for LV sugfferes with high uric acid to determine how restrictive the diet needs to be. My understanding of purines is that even some plant based food (some of my go to's) are high - oatmeal, dried beans... I find it interesting you got help in India as curcumin seems to helpful in the cessation of the inflammation of epithelial cells problematic in gout and LV. Did you ayurvedic diet recommend specific levels of turmeric consumption?

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Replies to "Thanks for the post. I will suggest my husband gets uric acid tested. Anecdotally, his reaction..."

Hi @kawalker
Sorry for the late response, I didn't get notifications about messages here until someone gave me an @ recently.
I hope this message reaches you.
I totally agree with your post about the Mayo clinic needing to have more focused studies on LV to help support and provide us with various options to battle the condition.
For me, there was not a major change in diet, since I'm Indian, and our cuisine can be heavily vegetarian by default. We do use Curcumin and Turmeric in our dishes which are known to be anti-inflammatory, so I'd highly suggest using those in your husband's diet too.

I know for me, once I got it under control, I could have the things I used to eat in moderation without any flair up occuring. I've not had another attack of ulcers since 2019.
My diet did not have any meat in it for at least 9 months. Dairy was fine, yogurt especially. I ended up eating a lot of fruit, veggies and curries. I will say, that did help with weight reduction, which I think also helps keep this condition under control. Since then, I've made a huge effort to get, and stay, fit. The better the blood circulation I have, the less likely this condition is to re-occur (in my mind). I found that it was very cyclical. Attack occurs, I lose lack of motivation and it hurts to work out, I get worried that it'll happen if I do anything too strenuous, and I don't exercise. If the diet helps and it stays away for a few months, I highly suggest trying to get 10k steps in a day if you're husband is up for it to help circulation.