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.