Treatment Overview
There is no cure for primary
Raynaud's phenomenon, although the condition often can
be effectively controlled. You may be able to limit or lessen the severity of
attacks by keeping warm; managing emotional stress; and avoiding medications or
other substances that affect blood flow, such as nicotine, caffeine, or cold
medications that contain pseudoephedrine. Avoiding beta-blockers, which are
often used to treat high blood pressure and fast or irregular heart rates, is
also advised. Beta-blocker medications slow the heart rate and decrease how
forcefully the heart contracts, causing even less blood to flow through your
capillaries and making symptoms of Raynaud's worse.
If Raynaud's phenomenon can't be effectively controlled with home
treatment and it interferes with daily activities, your health professional may
prescribe medications. Medications such as
calcium channel blockers (including nifedipine),
sildenafil, angiotensin II receptor antagonists (such as losartan), vasodilators (such as
nitroglycerin and hydralazine), which are used to treat high blood
pressure, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (such as fluoxetine) may help increase blood flow to your hands and feet and
relieve symptoms.
Some alternative treatments have shown promise in treating
Raynaud's phenomenon.
Ginkgo biloba was shown in one study to reduce the
number of Raynaud's attacks.2 Certain behavioral
therapies have also shown positive results.
Biofeedback training or
autogenic training, in which a person attempts to
control blood flow and skin temperature, may help in treating Raynaud's
phenomenon.
If the condition is related to an underlying disease, a drug, or a
specific activity (secondary Raynaud's), treating the underlying disease or
stopping the drug or activity may also decrease the symptoms of Raynaud's
phenomenon.