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Ask HN: Constant pain in my hands, any advice?

3 pointsby bgiaover 8 years ago
Since September I&#x27;ve been experiencing some mild but very uncomfortable pain in my hands, especially in the right one. It is becoming more and more painful to type and to hold a mouse. I&#x27;m very concerned because my hands are, with my eyes, my main working tools.<p>As anyone experienced this? What can I do?<p>When I look it up online, I find things about Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, but there doesn&#x27;t seem to be anything actually useful to do to make this go away besides maybe getting an operation (that feels extreme).

8 comments

epcover 8 years ago
See a doctor, get a referral to an ergonomic specialist.<p>Immediate action: try wearing a wrist brace, at least on the right hand. This will make a lot of activities difficult to do. That is the point.<p>In 1993 I went on a multi–night bender writing a gopher server that could also speak HTTP, using a keyboard and computer that weren&#x27;t mine which didn&#x27;t have a wrist rest. At the end of the bender I had a working gopher server, but my wrist had swollen so badly I couldn&#x27;t type anymore (while the bones of my hand ached badly, the surface skin was numb). It took six months of working with a wrist brace to undo the damage and to this day it resurfaces from time to time.
Qwertystopover 8 years ago
If you catch it early enough, CTS can be handled by physical therapy. Go to an orthopedist.<p>Secondary: In some cases, reduced bloodflow can cause pain. Are you working in a place that has been notably colder since September? Perhaps wear a jacket while you work, and&#x2F;or wear gloves when outside (smartphones have an unfortunate tendency to discourage glove use in weather that really does justify it).
kafkaesqover 8 years ago
Really, stop looking up stuff online (except to find a specialist ASAP). That will just inflame your condition even more. But do find specialist, <i>right now</i>, please. As in, call in sick to take a half or a full day off (just to find someone available and make an appointment) if you have to. That&#x27;s what your sick days are <i>for</i>, actually.<p>Better, try to see at least 2, ideally 3 specialists. (That&#x27;s what I&#x27;ve found to be prudent for any condition substantially &quot;tricky&quot; -- like potential nerve damage, for example). But definitely make sure to see someone as as soon as humanly and physically possible. Because that&#x27;s how serious your situation is.<p>It isn&#x27;t necessarily likely (so I don&#x27;t want to sensationalize), but there&#x27;s a significant chance that your condition can &quot;tip&quot; into a state such that the damage is essentially untreatable. Significant enough such that there&#x27;s really no value proposition at all delaying action, any further.
SamReidHughesover 8 years ago
Things I&#x27;ve done to completely get rid of wrist pain:<p>- use a Kinesis Advantage keyboard: works, but it&#x27;s like, the wrist is still weak, and you can&#x27;t use laptops (or mice?).<p>- use a piano keyboard: play the piano regularly, and vigorously. This makes my problems go away _completely_. And then I stop playing, and... a few years later, I get the problem again. So I start playing regularly again, and the problem&#x27;s gone again. By vigorously I mean playing etudes that push the limits of your muscular endurance. Somebody mentioned physical therapy, and I think this is an example of that.<p>Note that one symptom of my problems was a loss of grip strength.<p>I think that even for non-ergonomic keyboards, the choice of keyboard matters a lot -- some keyboards require less hand strain to reliably actuate the keys -- less precise movements. For example, the last two Vaio Z models were horrible, compared to, say, Thinkpads. And some cheapo office keyboard is worse than something with a clear actuation point (such as Cherry MX or Topre or a buckling spring keyboard). Basically, I think whatever key switch is easiest to use in cold weather is better than the others.
Mzover 8 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=12986759" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=12986759</a>
GFischerover 8 years ago
I had acute pain in my right hand last year - went to a doctor, wore a brace, now use wrist pads, and it went away.<p>So I second the advice of seeing a doctor.<p>The week with the brace was awful, but, as other posters mention, it&#x27;s the point :) .<p>I do live in a country where I can have a week off for medical reasons and still get paid though.
beatover 8 years ago
First recommendation: see a doctor. There can be many causes besides carpal tunnel.
AnimalMuppetover 8 years ago
I agree with all the others that say to go see a doctor. If you don&#x27;t know the actual cause, any treatments you try are much less likely to fix it...