What does a gout attack feel like?
Sudden — often waking you at night — with rapidly escalating pain in one joint, classically the big toe base, though ankles, knees, and later wrists and fingers join in. The joint turns red, swollen, warm and untouchably tender, peaking within a day and, untreated, grumbling for one to two weeks.
What actually causes gout — is it just rich food?
Mostly genetics and kidney urate handling — about two-thirds of urate is disposed of by the kidneys, and inherited variation there is the dominant driver. Food and drink modulate it: alcohol (especially beer), sugary drinks (fructose), and purine-heavy meats and shellfish raise risk; but plenty of careful eaters get gout, and blaming diet alone both shames patients and undertreats the disease.
How is gout diagnosed for certain?
Gold standard: finding urate crystals in fluid drawn from the joint. In practice, a classic picture plus raised uric acid often suffices — with two caveats we respect: uric acid can read normal during an attack, and the infected-joint mimic must always be excluded when fever or uncertainty exists.
How do I stop an attack fast?
Early treatment (within the first hours) works dramatically better: anti-inflammatory medication per your physician, cold packs, rest and elevation of the joint, hydration. Attack treatment puts out the fire; it does nothing about the crystals — that’s the long-term game.
Do I need daily medication for life?
If attacks recur, tophi form, or kidney stones appear — the guidelines (ACR, EULAR) say yes: urate-lowering therapy (usually allopurinol), titrated until blood urate stays below the crystal-forming threshold (under about 6 mg/dL, lower with tophi). Kept at target, crystals dissolve over months and attacks stop. Stopping the drug restarts the clock — which is why ‘medication holidays’ quietly rebuild the disease.
Why did my attack start right after beginning urate-lowering tablets?
Falling urate destabilises existing crystals — a known, temporary effect, which is why treatment starts with flare cover and why the answer is to continue, not abandon, the medication. Attacks during the first months of therapy mean it’s working, not failing.
What should I eat and drink — honestly?
The genuinely useful list: reduce beer and spirits, cut sugary drinks, moderate red meat and organ meats/shellfish, hydrate well (2+ litres), favour low-fat dairy (mildly protective), coffee is fine, cherries have modest supportive data. Weight loss helps meaningfully. Crash diets and fasting, however, can trigger attacks — reduction should be gradual, which our nutrition team programmes properly.
When is surgery indicated for gout?
Rarely — and it’s a sign of late-treated disease. Surgery is occasionally needed to remove large tophi that ulcerate, infect or destroy tendon and joint, or to repair joints wrecked by years of uncontrolled crystals. Every one of those operations is preventable in principle: urate kept at target dissolves tophi chemically. The best gout surgery is the one modern medication makes unnecessary.
Is gout linked to other health problems?
Strongly — hypertension, kidney disease, diabetes and cardiovascular disease travel with it. A gout diagnosis is a metabolic health checkpoint: we use it to screen and address the cluster, not just the toe.