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Melbourne: A 35-year-old woman in Australia whose skinny jeans cut off the blood supply to her calf muscles collapsed and was forced to crawl to seek help, prompting health experts to warn people not to wear it.
"When she arrived, she had massive, really severe, swelling of both calves to the extent we were unable to take her jeans off without cutting them," according to Thomas Kimber, a consultant neurologist and co-author of the Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry journal article.
"She couldn't move her ankles or toes properly and had lost feeling in her lower legs and feet," he said.
The doctors at the local hospital found she had damaged muscle and nerve fibres in her lower legs as a result of prolonged compression while squatting, made worse by her very tight jeans.
The blood supply had been reduced to her leg muscles, causing them to swell and the adjacent nerves to compress, the AAP news agency reported on Tuesday.
Kimber said that the case was a "cautionary tale" and people wearing skinny jeans should avoid squatting for long periods or wear something loose or with elasticity. The woman spent hours squatting while helping a relative move house.
Her skinny jeans felt increasingly tight and uncomfortable, but she did not think much of it and later went for a walk.
"As she was walking, she was having trouble lifting her feet and it got so bad she eventually fell and was unable to get up again," Kimber said.
No-one was around, it was dark, and she spent hours lying on the ground before eventually crawling to the side of the road and hailing a cab to take her to hospital.
"It is well recognised that squatting for long periods of time, regardless of what you are wearing, can occasionally cause compression of the perineal nerve which is at the knee," he said.
"But this is the first case we are aware of where there has been such severe calf muscle swelling and such involvement of the two main nerves, the perineal and the tibial.
"She has fully recovered after being put on an intravenous drip and discharged after four days when she could walk unaided, Kimber said. The case is reported in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
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