Thalalgia

The diagnosis of talalugia disease (Talalagia) is very common in modern society. According to statistics, almost half of the world's population is diagnosed with it. This pathology is very popular among patients in people aged approximately twenty-five years. Despite the fact that the disease is quite common, there are no official statistics due to the lack of obvious and precise symptoms. To correctly formulate pathology, doctors use a patient survey using the so-called Reitel scale. Some symptoms of the disease appear in childhood - these are cramps in the toes, numbness and pain in this area, periodic cramps of the arch of the foot. These are all the first signs that can appear at any age. It is worth noting the fact that these conditions are observed in the majority of people living on planet Earth. In addition to high legs, some patients complain of throbbing in the calves and muscle cramps in the popliteal pits. Quite often there are cases when talalagia does not appear at all. Only a small proportion of patients report a feeling of numbness or tingling in their feet. The overwhelming majority of patients say that seizures are not typical for them. Like many other chronic diseases, an accurate diagnosis is made using ultrasound examination of the vessels of the lower extremities. In addition, the patient undergoes MRI and CT diagnostics. Very often, the diagnosis is made as a result of an examination by a specialist doctor. It should be noted that there is a fairly large number of accurate diagnosis of the disease. Talalaga is a rather specific disease, and even specialists sometimes cannot make an unambiguous diagnosis. It is important to note that due to the absence of any obvious signs, the disease can be classified as a purely female disease due to its significant frequency. If



Talalgia is called pain along the sciatic nerve, which seems to take over the entire leg, but radiates to the heel. With such sensations, unpleasant sensations occur in several areas below the belt. Only in this case there is no paresthesia (a feeling of tingling with needles, goosebumps), and there are no problems on the inner surface of the thigh - so it is not possible to feel the manifestations of lumbar radiculopathy. Talalgia of the leg was once regarded by doctors as one of the main types of neuropathy of the sciatic branch. Such neuromuscular disorders can also be “heard” when nerve endings are pinched in the form of a herpetic pathogen.