Symptoms of gangrene depend on its location and cause. Dry gangrene often starts with a red line around the affected area. This area then turns dry and black.
These are other symptoms of gangrene:
- Coldness and numbness in the affected area
- Pain in or beyond the affected area
- Redness and swelling around a wound. This is often a sign of wet gangrene.
- Sores that keep cropping up in the same place
- Persistent, unexplained fever, with a temperature higher than 100.4°F (38°C)
- A bad-smelling wound
- Striking discoloration of the skin, with shades of greenish-black, blue, red, or bronze
- Pus or discharge from a wound
- Blisters and a crackling feeling under the skin
- Muscle aches, weakness, diarrhea, and loss of appetite (sometimes)
- Confusion, pain, fever, and low blood pressure, especially if the infected gangrene spreads inside your body
- Shock
The earlier gangrene is treated, the more successful the treatment is likely to be. So if you have any of the above symptoms, seek care right away.