Post-Surgical Neuropathy: Why Nothing in Your Recovery Protocol Is Designed to Stop the Burning
Up to 40% of knee and hip replacement patients develop post-surgical neuropathy , persistent burning, tingling, or numbness in the feet and legs that has nothing to do with how the surgery went. Most are told it's temporary. Most are given the same tools: ice, compression, pain meds, physical therapy. These tools address the surgery. None of them are designed to address what the surgery did to the nerves.
Why the standard recovery toolkit misses it
Post-surgical neuropathy is driven by a specific biochemical event: the tourniquet pressure and inflammatory cascade of major joint replacement depletes localized magnesium in peripheral tissue. Peripheral nerves depend on magnesium to regulate their own firing threshold. Without it, small-fiber nerve endings misfire continuously, producing burning, tingling, and numbness that standard recovery tools cannot touch, because none of them address the magnesium deficit.
What surgery actually does to the nerves
The surgical tourniquet cuts off circulation to the limb for the duration of the procedure (typically 60-90 minutes). When circulation resumes, the resulting inflammatory cascade depletes magnesium from the interstitial tissue surrounding peripheral nerves. This deficit is localized: blood magnesium levels can appear normal while tissue-level magnesium in the foot and lower leg is critically low.
Peripheral nerves (specifically the A-delta and C fibers responsible for burning and tingling) use magnesium to regulate their own firing threshold. When tissue magnesium drops below the threshold needed for normal function, these fibers fire continuously and without the stimulus that should trigger them. The burning is real. It's measurable nerve dysfunction with a specific cause.
This is also why oral magnesium supplements don't reliably resolve it. They raise systemic blood levels. They cannot restore tissue-level magnesium in the distal extremities. That's the exact site where the deficit exists.
The only delivery method that reaches the tissue
In 2023, a clinical trial in the Journal of Palliative Medicine tested transdermal magnesium chloride on peripheral neuropathy patients. Symptom scores dropped significantly by week 8.
This is what topical delivery does that oral supplementation cannot. Applied directly to the skin over the affected area, magnesium chloride absorbs into the subcutaneous tissue where the nerves are. It restores the specific deficit that surgery created, at the specific site where it exists.
Neuropura contains pharmaceutical-grade magnesium chloride combined with arnica, frankincense, MSM, and aloe in a shea butter base formulated to carry actives past the skin barrier, delivering the compound to the tissue that surgery depleted.
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The problem isn't pain tolerance. Nothing has addressed the actual mechanism.
See How Neuropura WorksWhy everything else failed and this one doesn't
Neuropura Topical magnesium
- Delivers magnesium directly to peripheral tissue
- Addresses the exact deficit surgery creates
- No cognitive side effects
- Backed by 2023 clinical trial
- Applied exactly where it burns
Everything else Wrong mechanism
- Target surface or wrong receptor class
- Oral pills can't restore tissue-level magnesium
- Relief wears off, burning returns unchanged
- Gabapentin: cognitive fog, returns on taper
- None address the localized magnesium deficit
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