<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Jana</b></i> I had a lot of labs done back in November for tingling in my hands and feet. I originally thought it was from the IV antibiotic I was on, so mentioned it to the doctor, and he wanted to rule out a lot of issues that could cause the problem. My A1c is 6.0, which doesn't seem high enough for sugar to be the problem. When nothing significant was found in the lab results, he sent me to a neurologist. She did some tests and didn't find much either. However, she told me she had done some reading and discovered there have been studies showing an incidence of slightly slow nerve conductivity in some cf patients. There's no explanation for what causes it, but the good news for me is it hasn't been shown to progress in studies either--it just sort of is. That was the answer I wanted since I'm a pianist. It's nothing that's hard to live with. In fact, now that it has been going on for months unchanged, I rarely even notice it, but the idea of it progressing was scary. I guess this doesn't really help with your obviously more severe issue, but I did think it was quite interesting.</end quote>
Thanks for sharing your story. I'm glad it hasn't progressed for you! I am very annoyed by the sensation, but wasn't thinking long term, but my husband became very concerned about it being permanent or getting worse.