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Heat Edema – Why Your Ankles Have Turned Into Biscuit Dough

You
look down. You blink. You look down again. Those are your feet, yes. You
recognize the bunion from 1987 and the hammer toe from that unfortunate clog
phase. But why do they look like they belong to someone twenty pounds heavier?

Welcome
to heat edema. It sounds like a medical condition from a Victorian
novel, but it’s just a fancy way of saying, “Your ankles and feet are swollen
because it’s hotter than a two-dollar pistol out there.”

Here’s
what happens. The Dog Days heat makes your blood vessels expand (they’re trying
to cool you off, bless their hearts). Gravity, that relentless jerk, pulls
fluid down into your lower legs. Meanwhile, your body’s natural pumping action
isn’t quite as zippy as it used to be. So the fluid just… hangs out. Puddles,
really. And your ankles start to look less like ankles and more like stuffed
sausages.

The
good news? Heat edema is usually not dangerous. It’s uncomfortable. Your shoes
might feel tight. Your socks leave deep grooves. You might feel a little
“puffy.” But it’s rarely an emergency.

The
bad news? It’s annoying. And if you ignore it completely, it can make walking
harder and skin more fragile.

So
let’s fight back with some very dignified (and slightly silly) strategies.

Strategy
#1: Put Your Feet Up. And I Mean Up.

Not just on the ottoman. Not crossed on the coffee table. Up. Above
the level of your heart if possible. Lie on the couch and stack pillows under
your legs. Watch an old movie. Read a murder mystery. Let gravity work for you
instead of against you. Thirty minutes of feet-up time can drain that swelling
like magic. If it doesn’t work fairly quickly (within a day or two of regular
elevation), then it’s time to check with your doctor. But usually? Up they go,
down the swelling goes.

Strategy
#2: Wiggle Those Toes Like You Mean It.

While you’re sitting (or lying with feet up), do ankle circles. Point and flex
your feet. Pretend you’re writing the alphabet with your big toe. Any movement
of the calf muscle acts like a little pump, squeezing fluid back up toward your
heart. It’s free, you can do it while watching the news, and no one has to know
you’re doing “secret foot aerobics.”

Strategy
#3: Cool Water Soaks (Not Hot!).

A basin of cool, not ice-cold, water up to your ankles. Sit for ten minutes.
The cool helps constrict those over-expanded blood vessels, and the water
pressure helps push fluid out. Plus, it feels lovely. Add a few drops of
peppermint oil if you’re feeling spa-like. You’ve earned it.

Strategy
#4: Watch the Salt Shaker (But Don’t Throw It Away).

Unlike with heat cramps, where a little salt helps, heat edema means you want
to be gentle with sodium for a few days. Skip the pickles and the potato chips.
Eat fresh foods: watermelon, cucumbers, tomatoes. They have water and
potassium, which helps flush out the extra fluid.

When
to call the doctor (because I have to say this):

If the swelling is only in one leg, or it’s red and hot to the
touch, or you have chest pain or shortness of breath, that’s not Dog Days
edema. That’s a different animal. Call right away. Also call if putting your
feet up for two days doesn’t help, or if the swelling gets worse instead of
better.

But
for garden-variety, “my sandals don’t fit and I look like the Pillsbury
Doughboy” swelling? Feet up. Wiggle toes. Cool soak. Laugh at Sirius. You’ve
got this.

And
remember: even Duke the dog gets puffy paws in the heat. You’re in good company. 

Originally Published on https://boomersnotsenior.blogspot.com/

I served as a teacher, a teacher on Call, a Department Head, a District Curriculum, Specialist, a Program Coordinator, and a Provincial Curriculum Coordinator over a forty year career. In addition, I was the Department Head for Curriculum and Instruction, as well as a professor both online and in person at the University of Phoenix (Canada) from 2000-2010.

I also worked with Special Needs students. I gave workshops on curriculum development and staff training before I fully retired

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