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Raynaud's disease
(redirected from Raynauds)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Ray·naud's disease  (r-nz)
n.
A circulatory disorder caused by insufficient blood supply to the hands and feet and resulting in cyanosis, numbness, pain, and, in extreme cases, gangrene.

[After Maurice Raynaud (1834-1881), French physician.]

Raynaud's disease [ˈreɪnəʊz]
n
(Medicine / Pathology) a disease, mainly affecting women, in which spasms in the blood vessels of the fingers or toes restrict blood flow to the affected part, which becomes pale, numb, and sometimes painful Often shortened to Raynaud's
[named after Maurice Raynaud (1834-81), French physician who first described it]


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Donations can be Raynauds and Scleroderma Association, 112 Crew Road, Alsager, Cheshire, ST7 2JA.
Donations can be Raynauds and Scleroderma Association, 112 Crew Road, Alsager, Cheshire, ST7 2JA.
It started when a friend was diagnosed with Raynauds, a condition where blood fails to reach areas of the body under cold or extreme heat.
 
 
 
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