What I was trying to get to was, does it eventually get better?
i.e. You do some riding, and then after a while (due to the neurotransmitters and physiological reactions) your fingers return?
The reason I asked about getting cold when getting upset/stressed is because this happens to Raynaud's patients. Because it's a physiological response...
I don't see how taking dietary blood thinners, where the evidence isn't strong, will help here.
It may be that the vibrations, bar set up, and the cold all act together to bring about this response from your system.
I see. How do you define eventually? Over a 45 minute commute, it gets progressively worse. Longer than that the pain does die down but the fingers remain cold, (if I touch my cheek it feels like a lolly).
What I was trying to get to was, does it eventually get better?
i.e. You do some riding, and then after a while (due to the neurotransmitters and physiological reactions) your fingers return?
The reason I asked about getting cold when getting upset/stressed is because this happens to Raynaud's patients. Because it's a physiological response...
I don't see how taking dietary blood thinners, where the evidence isn't strong, will help here.
It may be that the vibrations, bar set up, and the cold all act together to bring about this response from your system.