Raynaud disease

Overview


Plain-Language Overview

Raynaud disease is a condition that affects the small blood vessels in the fingers and toes, causing them to narrow excessively in response to cold or stress. This narrowing reduces blood flow, leading to episodes where the affected areas turn white or blue and feel cold and numb. When blood flow returns, the skin may turn red and throb or tingle. The condition primarily involves the circulatory system and can cause discomfort and temporary changes in skin color. It is more common in women and often begins in young adulthood. While it usually affects the fingers and toes, it can also involve the ears, nose, or lips. The main health impact is related to these episodic blood flow changes and their symptoms.

Clinical Definition

Raynaud disease is a primary vasospastic disorder characterized by episodic, reversible digital ischemia due to exaggerated vasoconstriction of small arteries and arterioles in response to cold or emotional stress. It is caused by hyperactivation of the sympathetic nervous system leading to intense alpha-adrenergic receptor-mediated vasospasm without underlying structural vascular disease. The hallmark clinical presentation includes a triphasic color change of the digits: pallor (white) from ischemia, cyanosis (blue) from deoxygenation, and rubor (red) during reperfusion. It is distinguished from secondary Raynaud phenomenon by the absence of associated connective tissue disease or vascular pathology. The condition is significant because recurrent ischemia can cause pain, ulceration, or rarely digital gangrene. Diagnosis is clinical, supported by normal nailfold capillaroscopy and absence of autoantibodies. It primarily affects the peripheral microvasculature and is a functional rather than structural vascular disorder.

Clinical Presentation


Diagnostic Workup


Pathophysiology


Treatments


Prevention


Outcome & Complications


Differential Diagnoses


Medical Disclaimer: The content on this site is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you think you may be experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional with questions about a medical condition.

Artificial Intelligence Use: Portions of this site’s content were generated or assisted by AI and reviewed by Erik Romano, MD; however, errors or omissions may occur.

Analytics Disclosure: If you allow analytics cookies, Doctogenic uses Google Analytics, Microsoft Application Insights, and Microsoft Clarity to understand site usage, diagnose issues, review heatmaps and session replay recordings, and improve the service on pages where those tools are enabled. Clarity is not enabled on account, purchase, billing, checkout, Stripe-related, or admin pages. You can change this choice through Cookie preferences.

USMLE® is a registered trademark of the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME). Doctogenic and Roscoe & Romano are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by the USMLE, FSMB, or NBME. Neither FSMB nor NBME has reviewed or approved this content. "USMLE Step 1" and "USMLE Step 2 CK" are used only to identify the relevant examinations.