Friday 27 April 2012

Repetitive Strain Injuries



http://personalinjuryclaims1.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/RSI-symptoms.jpg
www2.hull.ac.uk http://goo.gl/v9Lc
Repetitive strain injuries (or RSIs) are exactly that: strain that is caused by doing something over and over again the same way. It has a lot of other fancy names too (upper limb disorders, occupational overuse syndrome, isometric contraction myopathy - eek!) but for now, we'll stick with RSI since it's descriptive enough.

RSIs are the most common form of work-related injury and can be found in people who work in manual or office based jobs - in other words, pretty much everyone. The muscles of the fingers, wrists, hands, arms and shoulders are the ones we're going to talk about.

Imagine you work at a checkout, and you spend all day sitting down twisting from left to right while you swing shopping across the scanner. This is the definition of repetitive, and you can imagine how tired and sore your back and arms would be. What do you mean, this won't apply to you as you work in an office?

Okay, imagine you work at a desk (I'm guessing this will be a lot easier to imagine for the majority of people reading), and rather than the constant movement from left to right that our checkout worker has, you now seem to be mostly maintaining a static posture, with only your arms moving as you type or write.

Evolution: Somewhere, something went terribly wrong.
sinz.org http://goo.gl/dyljc
Hmm, sounds familiar, doesn't it?

The body is extremely good at protecting and repairing itself, but if we spend hours making the same repetitive movements, this healing is not able to keep up with the small amounts of damage we do over and over again. It may take months or even years for the symptoms to show: these can be a slight ache which develops into pain over time, along with numbness and pins and needles in the upper limbs.

If you are feeling any of these, there are a few things you can do to help:
  • It might sound silly but a warm up and cool down of the muscles used can work wonders - stretching and changing positions through lots of short breaks will really help (e.g. stand up to take a phone call)
  • Make sure your seating position is optimum (see our earlier post on posture) and that you make good use of equipment designed to make your work more comfortable
  • Make sure you have some time to relax throughout the day - there is nothing like a stress-busting few minutes of calm to ease aches and pains
  • A genius, if not very obvious, piece of advice is make sure your clothes fit well so you can move freely (anything that constricts you stops your muscles warming up and makes it difficult to reach for things)
    mildlyfab.com http://goo.gl/r3E9N
  • Speaking of reaching: do have most things within easy reach like the mouse and keyboard
  • If you use the phone a lot throughout the day, do obtain a headset rather than wedging the phone between your ear and shoulder
If the symptoms are worsening, then try to rest the area affected. Painkillers and anti-inflammatories may help, along with heat or cold packs to reduce the sensation of pain.

If you must continue the tasks which cause your pain, you might find supports like wrist splints useful.

Ask a physiotherapist for more advice on pain relief, exercise and how to avoid a recurrence of your symptoms.

Tuesday 3 April 2012

Referred Pain


www.123rf.com http://goo.gl/a816L


Many of you will have heard of referred pain, especially those who have seen a physiotherapist or their GP about back or neck pain, but what do we mean by "referred pain"? Is it pain that someone else has recommended to me? Pain which is passed on to somewhere else?

Thankfully, not the former. The latter is pretty close.

Referred pain is pain which is felt in a location other than the actual area of injury. So for example, people with sciatica most likely have pinched nerve roots in their lower backs but frequently feel horrible hot or shooting pains in their buttocks and thighs. Sometimes right down into their feet. It's not the thigh, or the foot that is injured, but the nerve itself, which then sends on these "pain" messages along its length (how very kind of it).

Nerves are like the electric wires of our body, and they connect our brain and spinal cord (our central nervous system) to the rest of our body. For instance if you want to wave to Jean over there, your brain will "tell" your hand to move by passing an electric signal down the spinal cord to the shoulder, arm and hand which will then activate your muscles to move.

Similarly, when you touch something cold or hot, or when you hold something solid or soft, your nerves pick up that message and send it up to your brain to interpret the sensation

We covered a fair bit of anatomy in the last post (scroll down to The Demon Back Pain for more information...) so we have a better idea of how the nerves leave the spinal column in neat spaces between the vertebrae. If the spaces become narrow, the nerves are pinched or "impinged". Likewise, the impingement can happen if you have extra tension along the nerve pathway (you see, nerves don't just travel on a path between things to get to their destination, they weave in and out, they branch off and they reach almost every structure in your body).

www.shutterstock.com http://goo.gl/yrBz0

As soon as the nerve picks up this impingement, the messages which it sends to the brain become confused. Instead of a perceiving a pinching at the neck or in the lower back, the electric signals are passed outwards from the spinal column (so into your shoulder or arm, or into your thigh or calf) where they can be misinterpreted as pain, or tingling or even numbness. If the messages being carried back down the nerve to power the muscles are confused, sometimes the problem becomes a weakness in those muscles.

A physiotherapist will determine where the referred pain is coming from as he/she will know which nerves come out from the spinal column in each space and which structures they supply.

Once this has been determined (by testing your sensation and the power of specific muscles) we can use manual therapy to help alleviate the pain, and give you exercises to help widen the spaces and help resolve the impingment. Happy days all round!