← Return to Does anyone find that a type of shoe helps your foot neuropathy?

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
@ray666

Hi, @bluesky222

I've been reading your exchange with @njed with much interest. Although there are variances, it appears we're all roughly in the same category of folks with PN.

I, though, was a drinker. Heavy? That's debatable. I'm inclined to say yes, I was a heavy drinker; however, I (1) never lost a job, (2) never got into a fistfight, (3) never got a DUI, (4) et cetera. I was one of those wild partiers who always got home safely.

Although today I've not had a drink in over 30 years, my Jack Daniels career began when I was not yet legal (my best buddy was legal, so he did the buying). College, then the Army (two tours overseas: Korea & Vietnam) served to stoke my drinking, as did post-grad work once I returned stateside. I've spent my working life in the theater, where drinking was––for most of us––just something we did (after a day's rehearsal or an evening performance).

Finally, I quit drinking. I was somewhere in my late 40s or early 50s. I detail all this to underscore my surprise about a year ago when I sitting with my neurologist's MA, going over the results of a recent brain MRI. (We still hadn't figured out what I had was PN.) Just as we were about to wrap us, the MA asked, almost apologetically, "Any chance you were a heavy drinker?" That floored me! I hadn't had a drink in 30+ years. How could she have known? "It leaves a permanent 'shadow' on your brain," she explained. Neither of us jumped to a PN conclusion. But today I wonder: Was my long-ago drinker the parent cause of my PN?

Ah, the mystery of it all! 😀

Cheers!
Ray

Jump to this post


Replies to "Hi, @bluesky222 I've been reading your exchange with @njed with much interest. Although there are variances,..."

@ray666 that's amazing (our similarities)! Thanks for responding! So, did your neurologist have any comments on the "shadow" and whether your drinking or "shadow" could be causing your PN? Both my current and Mayo neurologists say they do not think my drinking caused my PN (they think it is hereditary). They say that alcoholic neuropathy comes on quickly, rather than my gradual worsening, and that it most often involves tingling or pain of some sort. Their comments do not make it easier for me to stop my desire for one daily drink. But in my heart I suspect my past drinking (and now occasional drink) is causing my PN. Otherwise I've always had perfect health ... no problems and a healthy lifestyle.