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I've been following a Paleo/ Primal diet for about a year and a half now. Apart from occasional 'blips' on holiday, I stick to it most of the time. Last winter, no issues with cold hands and feet (I live in England). However, this year my hands and feet seem permanently cold and white. Any suggestions as to why, and solutions that would fit within the diet/ exercise regimen outlined in 'The Primal Blueprint'?

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I know why, it was the coldest English winter for thirty years ! ;) – Louisa Mar 14 2010 at 18:44

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While not a result of the paleo life, I have been having cold hands and feet in the winter, but not that much. Although, as a physical therapist my patients notice! I never thought of it as a problem really.

But indeed, after reading the Free The Animal post (mentioned above), I ate some more seafood (also tinned sardines and mackerel), which seems to work. Still experimenting. Before going paleo (some 2 years ago), we ate rather low in salt. We still do...

My wife, who really has cold hands and feet, will be the next in our little n=2 experiment. If only she would like the tinned fish...

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I can also vouch for getting cold hands/feet whilst on Paleo. My overweight brother has no such issues and loves sitting in a t-shirt whilst I shiver. I naturally fast a lot of the day and guess the lack of digestion perhaps stops me producing lots of heat. I heard Iodine can resolve this, but i'll be damned if I'm going to add yet another supplement.

I'm not sure from an evolutionary standpoint if low body temperature is a good thing. Guess it depends if you're on the African savannah or in an unheated flat in England. Roll on summer I say.

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Possibly it could be unrelated to your paleo diet-- I have something called Raynaud's Phenomonon, where I loose circulation to my hands and feet, usually because of the cold. Do your hands and feet also get numb and sometimes painful?

This disorder is most common in women, mine started when I was in high school but often it doesn't show up till later in life. some links:

http://www.medicinenet.com/raynauds_phenomenon/article.htm

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I have this also! Was much more pronounced in the high school years (purple & white hands and feet); now that I'm a little older, they still get really cold, but less colorful haha. – Jules K Nov 29 2010 at 15:40
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Raynaud's is understood to be an autoimmune problem, which can be diet related. – Rockgrrl Sep 20 2011 at 12:22
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I always get cold if I've not eaten enough (easy to do if not getting many carbs). Is it possible that you're spontaneously eating much less? I assume you're getting adequate omega 3 for your circulation? Both protein and coconut are very thermogenic so either would help keep you warm.

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I have been eating less recently (to recover from Christmas!). Will up the fat, protein and seafood as suggested. Thanks for taking the time to respond Jon and David. – Sjh268 Feb 15 2010 at 19:59
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I agree with David - if you find yourself inexplicably cold, eat something fatty. Wilderness classes have all taught me that if I'm cold during the night camping to eat a knob of butter, fat, or chocolate. It works. – NickW Mar 14 2010 at 19:33
I'm usually fairly cold the few hours between my daily meal, and then overheated after eating. – Mikael Jansson Mar 14 2010 at 20:25
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Get your thyroid checked. There is a problem for some people living on Paleo, that they get insufficient iodine from food. You might need to supplement with kelp, use iodized salt, or just eat more seafood.

Here is a link on this at Free the animal.
The hidden benefit of the SAD iodine

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I am unclear how the thyroid and iodine are related... Can you clarify? – gilliebean Feb 18 2010 at 3:08
Generally, iodine deficiency is not an issue, if you just make sure to eat sea food and/or use iodine-enriched table salt (which should be the standard in all countries these days). Eating extra iodine doesn't help. – Mikael Jansson Mar 14 2010 at 20:22
@gilliebean Four iodine atoms are connected to the amino acid tyrosine w/ the enzyme thyroid peroxidase (TPO), to give tetraiodothyronine, or thyroxine as it's also called. If you have an iodine deficiency, there won't be enough building material. – Mikael Jansson Mar 14 2010 at 20:24
Iodine deficiencies are extremely rare though, but increasing seafood should be good anyways. – Korion Feb 22 2012 at 18:59
I was iodine defficient while eating seafood 2 times a week and using a lot iodized salt. My energy improved a bizarre amount using lugol's solution. – Harmen Mar 6 at 10:37

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