Key takeaways
- Ongoing management starts with finding and treating the cause, while also protecting your feet and staying active to preserve function
- Medicines can reduce nerve pain, but a daily routine of foot care, exercise, and safety planning often improves quality of life
- Regular follow up helps you adjust treatments, prevent injuries, and catch problems early
- Support from care advocates can make appointments, transportation, and coordination much easier
What ongoing management means
Neuropathy management is a long term plan to reduce pain, keep you moving, and prevent complications. Your plan should match the cause of the nerve damage and your personal goals. For example, if you have diabetic neuropathy, blood sugar management is essential. If you have vitamin deficiency, correcting it is key. For autoimmune or inflammatory causes, your specialist may use targeted therapies. Across causes, many of the day to day steps are similar and can be built into a simple routine.
Build a routine around the cause
- Review the known or suspected cause and the treatments aimed at it
- Track symptoms and triggers in a simple daily log
- Set reminders for medicines, foot checks, and activity
- Revisit goals at each visit to keep the plan realistic and useful
Daily self care checklist
- Check your feet every day for cuts, blisters, redness, or swelling
- Wash and dry feet carefully, especially between toes, and use moisturizer to prevent cracks
- Wear shoes that fit well with socks, and avoid walking barefoot even at home
- Trim toenails straight across and file edges to avoid skin injuries
- Keep moving with gentle activity most days such as walking, tai chi, or water exercise
- If you have diabetes, monitor blood sugar as recommended and aim for targets set with your clinician
- Limit alcohol and avoid tobacco since both can worsen nerve damage
- Protect areas with numbness from heat or pressure and test bath water with your elbow first
- Keep floors clear, improve lighting, and use handrails where needed to prevent falls
Medications that may help with nerve pain
Medicines do not repair damaged nerves, but they can lower pain and improve sleep and function. Your clinician may suggest one of the following as a first choice, based on a guideline supported approach.
- Antidepressants used for nerve pain such as duloxetine or certain tricyclic medicines
- Anti seizure medicines used for nerve pain such as pregabalin or gabapentin
- Sodium channel blockers such as topical lidocaine for localized pain
- A high concentration capsaicin skin patch applied in clinic for localized nerve pain
These options can be started one at a time and adjusted slowly to balance benefit and side effects. Opioids are generally avoided for long term nerve pain because the risks often outweigh the benefits. Ask your clinician which option fits your health history, other medicines, and budget.
- Relief often builds gradually over several weeks
- Side effects like sleepiness or dizziness may improve when doses are adjusted
- If one option is not helpful after a fair trial, switching to another class is common
- Combination therapy can be considered when a single medicine does not provide enough relief
Movement and exercise programs
Gentle, regular activity can reduce pain intensity for many people and supports balance, strength, and mood. Start low and go slow, aiming for activities you enjoy. Short sessions done often are better than long sessions done rarely. Physical therapists can tailor a safe plan that protects numb areas and addresses gait or balance issues.
Physical therapy and protective devices
Targeted exercises, gait training, and bracing can improve stability and reduce fall risk. For foot drop or ankle weakness, an ankle foot brace may improve walking safety. If you use a cane or walker, ask for a fit check.
Breathing techniques, relaxation, and cognitive behavioral strategies can make pain more manageable and reduce stress. Good sleep habits and treatment of mood symptoms can also lower pain impact.
Electrical stimulation and other options
Some people try home electrical stimulation. Evidence is mixed, and it may not help everyone. If you are curious, discuss a supervised trial with your clinician so you can measure results and avoid skin irritation.
Prevent injuries and foot problems
Neuropathy reduces protective sensation. Small problems can become serious if unnoticed. Protecting your feet is one of the most powerful actions you can take.
Foot care basics
- Ask for a foot check at every visit and a full foot exam at least once each year
- See a podiatrist if you have calluses, deformities, or past ulcers
- Break in new shoes slowly and check inside shoes before wearing
- Seek care promptly for any cut, blister, or sore that does not improve within one to two days
Fall prevention at home and outside
- Remove loose rugs and clutter, add night lights, and use grab bars where helpful
- Wear supportive shoes indoors, not slippers
- Stand up slowly to avoid lightheadedness
- Practice balance exercises such as tai chi if approved by your clinician
Nutrition and vitamins
Vitamin B12 and neuropathy
Low vitamin B12 can cause or worsen neuropathy. Your clinician can check levels with a simple blood test. Supplementing can help when you are deficient. Taking large doses without deficiency has not shown clear benefit for most people. If you take metformin or acid reducing medicine, ask whether your level should be checked.
General nutrition
A balanced eating pattern rich in vegetables, fruits, lean protein, whole grains, and healthy fats supports nerve and heart health. Aim for steady blood sugar if you have diabetes. If alcohol has been part of your routine, talk about safe limits or abstinence since alcohol can damage nerves.
Infections and vaccination
Shingles can lead to long lasting nerve pain. Adults age fifty and older, and some younger adults with weakened immune systems, are advised to get the shingles vaccine to reduce the risk of shingles and its nerve pain complication. Ask your clinician when you are due.
- Schedule regular visits to adjust medicines and track progress
- Plan at least yearly foot exams, more often if you have risk factors or past foot problems
- Bring your medication list, blood sugar logs if you have diabetes, and your questions
- Tell your clinician about falls, new weakness, bowel or bladder changes, or new pain patterns
When to contact your healthcare professional
Call promptly if you notice any of the following
- A foot wound, redness, or swelling that is not improving
- Fever or chills with a skin problem on the foot or leg
- New weakness in the foot or hand, trouble walking, or falls
- Severe burning or shooting pain that is new or rapidly worsening
- Numbness rising up the legs, trouble with balance, or bladder or bowel changes
How Understood Care can help
A care advocate can help you prepare for visits, capture your questions, and follow through on next steps. We can also coordinate with specialists , arrange transportation, and help with mobility equipment and home safety. See the Understood Care resources listed in the References.
References
High authority medical references
- Peripheral neuropathy, diagnosis and treatment, Mayo Clinic
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/peripheral-neuropathy/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20352067 - Peripheral neuropathy, symptoms and causes, Mayo Clinic
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/peripheral-neuropathy/symptoms-causes/syc-20352061 - National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Peripheral neuropathy overview
https://www.ninds.nih.gov/health-information/disorders/peripheral-neuropathy NINDS - American Academy of Neurology practice guideline update for painful diabetic polyneuropathy
PDF direct
https://www.neurology.org/doi/pdfdirect/10.1212/WNL.0000000000013038
PubMed record
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34965987 American Academy of NeurologyPubMed - CDC, Your Feet and Diabetes
https://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/diabetes-complications/diabetes-and-your-feet.html CDC - CDC, Promoting Foot Health, clinical guidance
https://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/hcp/clinical-guidance/diabetes-podiatrist-health.html CDC - National Institute on Aging, Falls and falls prevention
https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/falls-and-falls-prevention National Institute on Aging - Mayo Clinic, Fall prevention tips
https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/healthy-aging/in-depth/fall-prevention/art-20047358 Mayo Clinic - NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Vitamin B12 health professional fact sheet
https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminB12-HealthProfessional/ Office of Dietary Supplements - Exercise for neuropathic pain, systematic review and expert consensus
Frontiers in Medicine full text
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/medicine/articles/10.3389/fmed.2021.756940/full Frontiers - Physical activity and exercise for chronic pain, Cochrane overview
https://www.cochrane.org/evidence/CD011279_physical-activity-and-exercise-chronic-pain-adults-overview-cochrane-reviews Cochrane - Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for neuropathic pain in adults, Cochrane review summary
https://www.cochrane.org/evidence/CD011976_transcutaneous-electrical-nerve-stimulation-tens-neuropathic-pain Cochrane - Capsaicin eight percent patch, randomized trial in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy, PubMed
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27746370 PubMed - Capsaicin eight percent patch, long term safety study, full text on PMC
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5139122 PMC - CDC, Shingles vaccination and prevention of postherpetic neuralgia
https://www.cdc.gov/shingles/vaccines/index.html CDC
Understood Care resources
- Understood Care Neuropathy support
https://understoodcare.com/care-types/neuropathy understoodcare.com - Understood Care Appointments support
https://understoodcare.com/care-types/appointments understoodcare.com - Understood Care Care Coordination
https://understoodcare.com/care-types/care-coordination understoodcare.com - Understood Care Mobility Equipment
https://understoodcare.com/care-types/mobility-equipment understoodcare.com - Understood Care Transportation help
https://understoodcare.com/care-types/transportation-help understoodcare.com
This content is for education only and does not replace professional medical advice. If you have new weakness, severe pain, fever with confusion, chest pain, or trouble breathing, call emergency services.