Wardrobe Woes: Hidden Health Hazards of Clothing



Men and women who shoehorn themselves into skin-tight jeans, battle to button their trousers or knot their neckties too tightly might unknowingly suffer nerve damage, digestive disturbances and even potentially deadly blood clots.

They're victims of fashion's hidden health hazards. Even some favorite accessories, like waist-cinching belts, can compress delicate nerves in the abdomen or constrain breathing and deprive heart and brain of needed oxygen.

It's enough to make you think ancient Romans showed sartorial smarts with loose-fitting togas.

For years, we've heard orthopedic surgeons and podiatrists warn that spike-heeled pointy pumps and sky-high platform sandals and boots lead to sprained ankles, strained backs, shortened Achilles tendons, disfigured toes and arthritis. Yet those warnings fail to stop many women from taking their chances with styles that could leave them sprawled on a sidewalk.

"Who hasn't tried to squeeze into a too-small pair of shoes, or wriggle into too-tight jeans?" said Dr. Orly Avitzur, a neurologist in Tarrytown, N.Y., who started warning about too-constricting skinny jeans on her Consumer Reports blog back in 2009. "Sometimes we realize right away that our choice of wardrobe or fashion is the culprit; other times, it only dawns on us when we begin to really suffer."

When patients seek medical help for pain radiating into the thigh, or numbness, or tingling, it's unlikely they suspect that the cut of their jeans might be the problem.

But sharp-eyed physicians like Dr. Malvinder S. Parmar, medical director of Timmins & District Hospital in Ontario, Canada, might recognize the hallmarks of meralgia paresthetica, the compression of a nerve running from the pelvis into the outer thigh.

In 2003, Parmar published a description of "tingly thighs" in three "mildly obese" women who wore low-rise jeans throughout the previous few months. Their discomforts resolved after four to six weeks "avoiding hiphuggers and wearing loose-fitting dresses," according to Parmar's 2003 correspondence in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

Fashionista and frump are both vulnerable to suffering for fashion's sake. Control-top pantyhose and compression undergarments designed to minimize tummies, flab and muffin tops "have flooded the marketplace and invaded our closets," Avitzur said. She advises anyone who develops physical ills from these undergarments to ditch them: "They are not worth the pain."

Avitzur has watched skintight Lycra and Spandex undergarments catch fire among teen athletes. A 15-year-old high school soccer player came to her last year with numbness, tingling and discomfort in her left thigh. Avitzur diagnosed a compressed nerve likely caused by Spanx.

The patient said all her teammates wore colored Spanx beneath their uniforms. Avitzur was stunned. "I didn't believe someone so young would be wearing the equivalent of our mothers' generation's girdle," Avitzur said.

Tight Pants, Tight Ties, Responsible for Several Apparel-Related Ills

Some clothing-related maladies go by mundane-sounding names that hardly hint at their potential to sicken. For example, a middle-aged or older man whose belly hangs below the waist of his pants may suffer from "tight pants syndrome," a term coined in a 1993 article by Dr. Octavio Bessa, an internist in Stamford, Conn.

Bessa described a collection of gastrointestinal symptoms including abdominal pain, heartburn and reflux a few hours after meals that he would see in 20 to 25 men every year. The common thread: All wore ill-fitting pants with waistbands several inches smaller than their bellies, Bessa reported in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Three years later, two diagnostic imaging specialists from Wales described a "sporting variant" of tight-pants syndrome that they linked to tight Neoprene bike shorts worn to prevent muscular injury. Drs. Charles G.F. Robinson and Nigel Jowett recounted how the shorts locked venous blood flow in the legs of a 25-year-old man after his workout on a stationary bike. The doctors determined he'd suffered deep venous thrombosis (DVT), clotting probably exacerbated by a hip fracture four years earlier.

Despite treatment with blood thinners, the patient later developed a dangerous pulmonary embolism, indicating a clot had traveled to his lungs.

Women suffer their own tight-pants agonies, too. A gynecological variation can foster yeast infections, pelvic pain, itching and irritations easily mistaken for a sexually transmitted disease. The solution? Looser, cotton clothing.

The way a woman wears her slacks might leave her prone to the breakdown of fatty tissue at the outside of the thighs, called lipoatrophia semicircularis, dermatologists say. "Persistent mechanical pressure" exerted by "strangling folds" of too-tight trousers can impair circulation and set the stage for this condition, especially in women who sit for long periods, according to a study from Chile's Universidad Andres Bello in the June 2007 Journal of Dermatology.

Wearing tight neckties and shirts with constricting collars can impede blood flow through neck veins and arteries and may affect vision. In a 2003 study of 40 men, half with glaucoma, three minutes with a tightened tie raised eye pressure among the majority of those with and without the disease. Elevated eye pressure is a key element of diagnosing and monitoring glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness.

The lead researcher, Dr. Robert Ritch, a glaucoma specialist at New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, maintained in the study in the British Journal of Ophthalmology that the transient rise in pressure readings "could affect the diagnosis and management of glaucoma." But several prominent glaucoma specialists said the study failed to establish that transient high pressure from the tightened ties could cause glaucoma.

Too-tight neckties might impede proper circulation in severe cases, research suggests.

Tight neckties also can limit neck movement and raise muscle tension in the upper back and neck, researchers at Korea's Yonsei University reported last year in "Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment and Rehabilitation." They tested 30 computer workers when wearing and not wearing tight neckties and concluded that "it is especially important for male workers to select and tie neckties appropriately" to prevent musculoskeletal injuries.

Although clothing-related pain and dysfunction can affect almost everyone, Avitzur said women have a tendency to overlook discomfort, for the sake of appearance. An admitted fashion health victim, Avitzur said she had worn ill-fitting boots and "too-heavy earrings that tore through one of my lobes."

She got the idea for a blog about skinny jeans while at the office of the plastic surgeon who repaired the damage from her poor earring choice.

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58 comments

  • Peter  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  2 months ago
    One trick for avoiding being strangled by your tie: Don't button the collar, let the tie do its job. It should keep the lapels close enough and allows some give if you need it. The reason going without a tie is so much more comfortable is that it usually also means leaving that killer top button undone.
  • GW  •  2 months ago
    At least now I have a medical reason for avoiding the clothes that are uncomfortable. Could that be the reason I love loose T-shirts and muu-muus? Now if someone could figure how to make a truly comfortable bra that actually works, I'd be in business.
    • SuntopW 2 months ago
      There are something called air bra which is light and nice to wear, or so I have heard.
    • Darlene 2 months ago
      Yeah, a bra without underwires, please! Those CANNOT be healthy. I refuse to wear them or let my daughter wear them. Restricting blood flow to parts of the body is never healthy.
  • Maureen  •  2 months ago
    BRING ON THE TOGAS!! Seriously, bring them on.
    • Marie 2 months ago
      And kilts.
    • Noonsa 2 months ago
      I know it's scandalous to be seen in burkahs these days, but I know some women deep down would love the relief of being able to wear one. I don't know about burkahs, but a nice sari sounds FANTASTIC. I'm a woman with a nice shape, but man, some times I wish it could just be comfort and beautiful ease, and NOT squeezing yourself into something and being on display all #$%$ day. Because women ARE on display, whether we admit it or not.
    • eppie 2 months ago
      Man or women ...in Togas only that would be liberating in all weathers?
  • Younger Grandma  •  2 months ago
    We women should NEVER dress for a male. NEVER. Dress for yourself and how comfortable you are. ALWAYS!! Keep in mind that the men will NOT be the ones to suffer the ill effects of what a woman is wearing. If he wants those tighter things, etc, then HE can wear them and wuffer his own consequences.

    Stop wearing the high heals because of men or how 'sexy' you may think they are!! Don't believe how bad feet can become?? Go to any nursing home with very elderly women!! VERY bad feet!!
    • Tom 2 months ago
      Your right women should undress for men.
    • jb 2 months ago
      I've got news for you Grandma, most women dress to impress other WOMEN. And they are brutal on each other.
    • bearfan 2 months ago
      JB? Took the words right out of my mouth!
  • Debbie S  •  2 months ago
    I'll take comfort over fashion any day, lol.
  • Observing absurdity  •  2 months ago
    On hot summer days - in the privacy of my home - it feels good to let the air flow freely over my skin. But for concerns of hygeine, [under]pants are a must!
  • Aziz  •  Anchorage, Alaska  •  2 months ago
    or, just wear sensible clothes. fashion is for people with esteem issues.
  • just me  •  2 months ago
    Lol, I see all these comments about the crazy high heels. I don't DO high heels. I put a pair on in the store recently just for gits and shiggles and my husband laughed when he saw me try to walk. I laughed too. Seriously who thinks it looks good to wear pointy shoes that make half your calf muscle bulge out in a strange circular shape? Strong healthy legs are great but high heels build the muscles in a strange unflattering way.

    I like being short. Bring on the cute flats but be sure their comfortable!
    • Guest 2 months ago
      I don't know, I saw him trying on heels the other day and he walked like a pro
  • SAW  •  2 months ago
    And yet how many times do I read in business advice articles that women MUST wear heels to the office if they want to get 'taken seriously'. It 'makes you look taller' and 'gives your leg a better line'. Flats 'make you look like a little girl playing dress-up'. REALLY? So they only way to get taken seriously is to permanently hurt your feet? No thank you. I'll stick to my flats. When I'm eighty I won't be complaining about my feet because I beat them up. They gotta last my lifetime.
  • by the by  •  2 months ago
    What I eat is bad for me; drinking is now out of the question; I can no longer wear hig heels, and now my clothes are bad for my health. I can't go on..... :-)
    • Sheila 2 months ago
      Don't forget poisonous makeup! (See other Yahoo article today)
  • slb  •  2 months ago
    Nothing more disgusting than seeing overweight women wearing spandex...ewwww!
  • JC  •  Louisville, Kentucky  •  2 months ago
    That's why I go to work nude..
  • TEN-OF-WANDS  •  2 months ago
    Neckties produce cerebral ischemia, which can lead to an M.B.A.
  • Carolyn  •  2 months ago
    Makes me want to wear my pajamas to work. Unfortunately, I don't think I'll get away with that one. I agree with GW on the whole bra issue, too!
  • Quint  •  2 months ago
    The Surgeon General recomends that everyone get naked and stay naked
  • 80's Child  •  2 months ago
    I like everything about this article except that now the saggy pants-wearing guys have a leg to stand on.
  • jackhammer  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  2 months ago
    I wore a pair of new tight blue jeans when I was 18. I bent over at the waist and felt a strong stinging pain in my thigh on the back of my leg. When I undressed that night I caught a glimpse of myself in a dressing mirror and was shocked that the back of my thigh was a deep purple with yellow lines from buttocks to knee. A blood vessel had burst and bled out under the skin. It took weeks to heal.
  • QXR  •  2 months ago
    They say clothing makes the man or woman, but since people have started buying Clothing from China, always sized too small, or from Mexico, always too baggy or from India, always too shabby, or from Italy, always too tight, or from England, always too stuffy. America needs to get back in the Clothing business and STOP Importing TOXIC JUNK.
  • Joe  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  2 months ago
    Take Saddam Hussein's neck tie for example!
  • Yahoo IsCrap  •  2 months ago
    "six pack abs" are also quite unhealthy- restricts the movement of internal organs