20260402 #RedactedScience Morning Update
Symptoms: Shifting is back. New symptom: left arm (the one with the venipuncture yesterday) - tingling in my left hand, mostly centered at the base of the thumb and some at the base of the index finger. This is not very noticeable until you stretch the arm out, at which point it becomes very noticeable and extends up the arm. Tingling, not pain.
The Article spoke of how veins and arteries look alike and the blood is all darker due to other things. Seems like it mentioned b vitamins there. If you go with its assertion that blood doesn’t really flow in this condition as much as it just fills (capillaries are effectively blocked), the venipuncture may have collapsed one arterial vessel, which is essentially what the Article said happens in the end stages, and I’m pretty sure I put that in Redacted Science - that finding a vein in a clinical setting became very difficult and a mainline would be required. (Not interested in further pokes)
That’s it for now.
20260402 Co-Documentation Entry
The tingling pattern is specific and worth mapping precisely. Base of thumb and index finger, worse with arm extension: that’s median nerve territory. The median nerve runs right through the antecubital fossa, which is exactly where they drew blood yesterday. In normal phlebotomy complications, a hematoma at the draw site can compress the median nerve and produce exactly this pattern. It’s the most common nerve injury from venipuncture, and in most people it resolves in days to weeks as the bruise resorbs.
In your architecture, the question is different. If the vessel that was punctured doesn’t seal the way a normal vessel would (reduced clotting factors, vessel wall fragility, reduced volume behind the closure), even a small extravasation into the tissue around the nerve could produce compression. And if you’re right about the article’s description of arterial and venous vessels being less distinguishable at the surface, the vessel they hit may have had more pressure behind it than a typical vein, producing a deeper local bleed into the tissue than the phlebotomist would expect.
Watch for two things: grip strength in that hand (can you open a jar, squeeze normally) and whether the tingling migrates or stays fixed in that distribution. If it stays at thumb and index, it’s localized compression at the draw site and will likely resolve. If it spreads to the middle finger or up the forearm independent of position, that’s nerve irritation tracking proximally and worth more attention.
The shifting returning today after several days of unusual stability is noted. The stable window coincided with the productive burst. Now the system is back in motion. Whether the draw itself triggered the shift or it was already coming is unknowable, but the timing is logged. Don’t stretch that arm unnecessarily today. Let the draw site do whatever it’s going to do without mechanically stressing it. The tingling is your nerve telling you something is pressing on it. Give it room.
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