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Home / 증상 / Numbness & Tingling in Japan: When to Seek Medical Care

Numbness & Tingling in Japan: When to Seek Medical Care

Need a doctor in Japan? Book a consultation now

Numbness and tingling (感覚異常, *kankaku ijō*) are common sensations that most people experience benignly — from sitting cross-legged too long to the pins-and-needles of a compressed arm nerve. But these symptoms can also signal serious conditions requiring urgent medical attention. Knowing the difference is critical, especially when traveling abroad without your regular doctor.

Understanding Numbness and Tingling

The medical term for abnormal sensation is paresthesia (感覚異常). It includes:

  • Tingling (pins and needles, ビリビリ感)
  • Numbness (しびれ, *shibire*)
  • Burning sensation
  • Feeling of cold or warmth not explained by temperature
  • Reduced ability to feel touch or pain

These sensations arise when sensory nerves are compressed, damaged, or receive abnormal signals. The cause can be mechanical (pressure on a nerve), vascular (reduced blood flow), chemical (diabetes, vitamin deficiency), or neurological (multiple sclerosis, stroke).

Common Causes in Travelers

Positional compression — the most common cause. Sitting cross-legged for long temple meditation sessions, falling asleep on a train in an awkward position, or keeping the arm above the head during sleep can all compress nerves transiently. Resolves quickly after changing position.

Carpal tunnel syndrome — compression of the median nerve at the wrist. Common in people who type heavily or do repetitive hand movements. Worsens with increased use (typing, writing, chopstick use over extended restaurant meals).

Cervical disc compression — neck disc problems causing arm numbness. Can be aggravated by long flights or sleeping in unusual positions on futon-style bedding.

Lumbar disc herniation — lower back disc pressing on sciatic nerve, causing leg numbness or tingling (sciatica).

Hyperventilation — rapid breathing during anxiety or panic causes CO2 drop, which produces tingling in hands and around the mouth. Not dangerous but very uncomfortable.

Vitamin B12 deficiency — common in vegans and vegetarians, causes peripheral neuropathy (tingling in hands and feet). Japan has many vegan-friendly restaurants but some B12-poor meals.

Diabetes-related neuropathy — pre-existing diabetic nerve damage that may become more symptomatic with dietary changes and irregular eating patterns while traveling.

Raynaud's phenomenon — temperature-triggered color changes and numbness in fingers. Common in Japan's cold winters, where fingers can become white/blue and numb when cold.

Stroke — sudden unilateral numbness or weakness is a stroke warning sign. A medical emergency.

Looking for Medical Help?

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Self-Care vs. When to See a Doctor

Situation

Recommended Action

Numbness from awkward position, resolves in minutes

No action needed

Carpal tunnel-type symptoms, familiar

Rest, wrist support, OTC anti-inflammatory

Neck-related arm tingling, familiar

Stretching, rest, OTC pain relief

Tingling in both hands after fast breathing

Slow breathing — likely hyperventilation

Persistent tingling in one limb for more than a day

See a doctor

Sudden numbness one side of face or body

Emergency — possible stroke, call 119

Need Medical Care in Japan?

Book a consultation with an English-speaking doctor. Online, in-person, or hotel visit available.

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Find Medical Care

Guides

Numbness with weakness in arm or leg

Emergency — see ER immediately

Numbness with speech difficulty

Emergency — call 119

Numbness with vision changes

Emergency — call 119

Numbness with severe neck or back pain after injury

See a doctor urgently

Gradual worsening numbness in both feet (months)

See a neurologist

The FAST Stroke Recognition Tool

F — Face drooping: Is one side of the face drooping? Ask the person to smile.

A — Arm weakness: Is one arm weak? Ask them to raise both arms.

S — Speech difficulty: Is speech slurred or hard to understand?

T — Time to call 119: Any of these signs? Call 119 immediately.

Stroke treatment is time-critical. Thrombolysis (clot-busting medication) is most effective within 4.5 hours of symptom onset. Japan's major hospitals have stroke response teams available 24 hours a day.

Finding a Doctor in Japan

For non-emergency numbness and tingling evaluation, visit an internal medicine clinic (内科, *naika*) or a neurologist (神経内科, *shinkei naika*). For numbness clearly related to neck or back problems, an orthopedic clinic (整形外科, *seikei geka*) is appropriate.

Translation apps have limited accuracy in neurological contexts. We strongly recommend clinics with English-speaking staff. Find English-capable internal medicine clinics at Traveler's Hospital hospital search or orthopedic clinics.

Estimated Costs

Service

Approximate Cost (JPY)

Internal medicine/neurology consultation

¥3,000–¥8,000

Nerve conduction study (NCS)

¥5,000–¥15,000

MRI brain/spine

¥15,000–¥40,000

Blood tests (vitamin B12, glucose, etc.)

¥3,000–¥10,000

Orthopedic consultation + X-ray

¥6,000–¥15,000

Stroke ER treatment

¥50,000–¥300,000+

Useful Japanese Phrases for Your Doctor Visit

English

Japanese

Pronunciation

I have numbness in my hand/foot.

手/足にしびれがあります。

Te/Ashi ni shibire ga arimasu.

My right arm feels weak.

右腕に力が入りません。

Migiude ni chikara ga hairimasen.

This started suddenly.

突然始まりました。

Totsuzen hajimarimashita.

I have tingling in my fingers.

指先にビリビリ感があります。

Yubisaki ni biribiri-kan ga arimasu.

I had a stroke before.

以前、脳卒中になりました。

Izen, nōsocchū ni narimashita.

My speech feels strange.

言葉がうまく出ません。

Kotoba ga umaku demasen.

I am diabetic.

糖尿病があります。

Tōnyōbyō ga arimasu.

Internal Links

If numbness accompanies joint pain or a musculoskeletal injury, see the joint pain guide or sprains and fractures guide. For numbness related to anxiety and hyperventilation, see the anxiety guide. Find internal medicine clinics at Traveler's Hospital.

FAQ

Q: Why do my hands tingle when I breathe fast during a panic attack?

A: Rapid breathing (hyperventilation) removes too much CO2 from your blood, which lowers blood CO2 and changes blood pH. This affects calcium ion availability in nerves, causing tingling in the hands, feet, and around the mouth. It is not dangerous and resolves when breathing normalizes.

Q: Can sitting seiza (on your knees) in Japan cause nerve damage?

A: Extended seiza (正座) — the traditional Japanese kneeling position — compresses the peroneal nerve behind the knee and causes classic "pins and needles" in the foot. This resolves within minutes of standing. It is not dangerous for occasional use but can cause temporary foot drop if maintained for very long periods.

Q: Is there a stroke risk from Japanese massage?

A: Japanese massage (shiatsu, 指圧) is generally safe. However, vigorous neck manipulation by unqualified practitioners can theoretically cause vertebral artery dissection, a rare but serious cause of stroke. Choose licensed therapists and inform them if you have neck conditions.

Q: Can vitamin B12 deficiency cause numbness on a short trip?

A: B12 deficiency neurological symptoms develop over months of deficiency, not days. However, if you already have marginal B12 levels (common in vegans) and travel to Japan with limited animal protein intake, you will not develop new deficiency from a short trip. Pre-existing deficiency symptoms, however, may be noticeable.

Q: My feet tingle at night — is this serious?

A: Nighttime foot tingling can be caused by restless leg syndrome, peripheral neuropathy (from diabetes or B12 deficiency), or poor circulation. If it is new and worsening, see a doctor. If it has been chronic and previously evaluated, maintain your usual management and see your regular doctor upon return.

Q: What is the best way to communicate a possible stroke to emergency services in Japan?

A: Call 119 and say "Nōsocchū no utagai ga arimasu" (脳卒中の疑いがあります) — "Possible stroke." Show written notes or use a translation app for this specific phrase. Time is the most critical factor in stroke outcomes.

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