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It wakes her up through the night.

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Could be the circulation in her legs as well. Tell her PCP and he may order Doppler studies of her veins & arteries to assess the flow.

I am never too quick to advise supplements without having recent lab work as baseline. It is best for mom to check with her doctor before giving her anything she isn’t prescribed due to possible electrolyte imbalance. I am not a doctor thus unqualified to provide any suggestions without lab work.

Cramping in the LE can also be a sign of dehydration. If she is on furosemide (Lasix) she may well be dehydrated.

Work with her PCP for evaluation. Many practices are doing telemed or still seeing patients that are not sick.
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
Thank you Shane, I will take all you said in consideration.
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Is she on a Statin?
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
Hi igloo572
Yes, she is on pravastatin.
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Good points and answers.  

I personally found that my leg cramps (experienced only rarely) didn't occur when I made sure to eat potassium based foods.   A banana was always a treat.
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
She takes a potassium supplement. Thank you for your response.
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Not only Statins, but other meds act to deplete the body's necessary nutrients to keep us balanced. I think the G.E.R.D. meds cause this cramping too, and even can cause falls. So I did stop the statins.
Not an expert here, but I take 500 mg. of Chelated Magnesium, and 1000 mg. of Vit D3. Adding probiotics also help me because there is a definite association going on with our gut and our brain.

That is what I take for the cramping. And do not forget to hydrate
(drink water).

For pain and cramping caused by over-exertion that day, I take
Bromelain, or eat fresh pineapple. (same enzyme).

I cannot advise you about your Mom, but I think it is okay to say what I take. You can check with an alternative practioner or nutritionist to learn more about mega-dosing vitamin supplements or concentrated food sources to help with cramping.

You can also gently massage her legs when this is happening.
And learn to pull the toes up, have her get up and walk it out, do not point her toes or have heavy covers on her feet. imo.
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
Thank you Sendhelp.
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Start by talking to her doctor.

I've read that this is sometimes the result of an potassium deficiency. Is she getting a less varied diet due to Covd 19?
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
HI BarbBrooklyn,
She eats very small portions but she is on potassium and magnesium supplements.
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If you Google statins and leg cramps, just a ton of articles. If your female, thin & on statins, the camps can be very super intense. There’s like 7 main RXs for statins. 2 of them seem to do this less.... pitavastin & fluvovastin. Talk with her MD about switching to another. My hubs was on Simvastin and had cramping, switched to atrovastin... no change; then pitavastin and he’s good.
she needs the statin for her cholesterol & heart health, so not a good idea to just stop it.
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angeltown7 Apr 2020
Yes she is on pravastatin, magnesium and potassium. Cramping happens 2-3 times every night. She is also on fluid restriction to 1200 cc per day.
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Bed socks. She has all my sympathy - this happens to me sometimes and it's extremely painful. The cramps can actually leave you with pulled muscles!

It came up in discussion in the medical gossip column of one of our more respectable newspapers not so very long ago, I'll see if I can find it - various suggestions were made, and there was an explanation from a learned physician, too. Bear with me!

P.S. I'm not on statins, but Igloo's reply is spot on too.
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This has been the best solution that we have ever found.

When you feel a cramp starting, grab a pinch of cinnamon and place it on your tongue. Just let it sit there and absorb from your saliva. It stops the cramp within seconds. I do recommend that you invest in a good quality cinnamon, generic brands are awful tasting. We use Saigon cinnamon from Costco, just FYI.

This works every time and we have been using it for a couple of decades now. Amazing.
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Sendhelp Apr 2020
Going to try that, thanks for real!

Reading: Cinnamon acts to lower one's blood sugar.
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Aanother thought, when the cramp starts, remind your mom " toes to your nose". You stretch your foot towards you and it often relieves the cramp.

Was told this many years ago by an elderly lady who learned it from her PT.
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Your Mom has diabetes.
Be very careful with her medications, ask her doctor. Really not safe to add even supplements unless you get advice.

I am reading "Diabetes without Drugs" by Suzy Cohen, Rph;
called America's Pharmacist. 2010
She describes in her book how "drug muggers" deplete things like magnesium.

I knew someone who's diabetes went away following the recommendations in this book.
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