What Causes Nerve Pain in the Lower Leg?

Nerve pain can be caused by a number of factors. There are many conditions, like diabetes that can have long-term complications, including nerve pain. Many types of injuries cause long-term nerve pain in the legs, which is why the costs of treatment can remain high in cost, since the condition never goes away.
  1. Diabetes Complications

    • One of the most common symptoms is called diabetic neuropathy. This is a burning, painful sensation in the legs that is due to the death of tissue from lack of oxygen. The nerves send out impulses that are painful in the legs.

    Blood Clot

    • If there is a significant blood clot in the legs, there will be a burning sensation, as the nerve sends out painful impulses.

    Injury Causing Pain

    • If the leg(s) get injured in an accident, the nerves in the area can become bruised. The bruising will cause pain in the area until the nerve bruising heals.

    Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy

    • If the nerves in the legs become severely injured, which is greater than bruising and less than severing a nerve, Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD) can occur. This is where the nerve continuously sends impulses that the pain extreme.

    Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

    • Complex regional pain syndrome is another type of injury to the nerve that is typically seen after surgery to the lower legs, where a nerve has been injured as a result of a surgical procedure.

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