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muleypt
Mar 27, 2002, 2:31 PM
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A few years ago while climbing fairly hard, I slowly developed this condition where the fourth and fifth (pinky) fingers on my left hand began to curl in toward my palm when I relaxed them - I had no control over it. I also experienced mild strength loss in those two fingers too. I went to the doctor who didn't have a clue what was wrong and wouldn't refer me to specialist (crappy HMO's). Anyway - have any of you guys experienced this before? Is this all in my mind?
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dynamic
Mar 27, 2002, 3:40 PM
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how long did the weakness/curling last? could you extend the fingers during this time? did you ever feel a pop? (not a tendon or ligament pop but one in your upper forearm) muscles were probably strained. depending on severity it should have healed in under two weeks providing you didn't keep abusing them.
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muleypt
Mar 27, 2002, 5:03 PM
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Dynamic - I was able to straighten them if I tried and I felt no popping at any time, it kinda creeped up on me. You know, it was with my left hand (I'm right-handed) and I wonder if it was just that I was not conditioning my weaker hand and forearm properly. You mention upper forearm - can you think of any weight excercise that would strengthen that area? I already have these funky "popeye" forearms so it would need to be an excercise to strengthen - not bulk up. I also work out regularly w/BD's doughnut and a grip-master. Any help appreciated.
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dustinap
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Mar 27, 2002, 5:54 PM
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All of my fingers on both of my hands do this. Same exact thing, I can straighten them, but relaxed they're curled in. I think it's just because you and I are such strong climbers.
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chirp
Mar 27, 2002, 6:11 PM
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Do you stretch frequently? Usually curling fingers with no outward pain means you have overly tight or hypertonic forearm muscles ( the flexors ). With your forearm forward at chest height, rotate your hand palm facing up. With your other hand feel the area about one cm forward of your "funny bone" towards your hand,( see if it is tender ). That is the attachment site for alot of your hand flexors...also feel along the muscles of your forearm to see if they are tender. Typically, overly tight flexors result in curling at rest of the fingers. Use a cold compress on the area of attachment and stretch the muscles by facing your hand palm down and pull back on your fingers. Ill try to locate a web link with pictures for you and post in a few. [ This Message was edited by: chirp on 2002-03-27 10:20 ]
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chirp
Mar 27, 2002, 6:18 PM
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Ok heres some links to get you started. one describes the flexors and the other give a decent deep stroke designed to strip out the muscles. Again...Stretch frequently and drink a ton of water. Caution, listen to your body and always warm up Flexors: http://www.exrx.net/Muscles/WristFlexors.html Stroke: http://danke.com/Orthodoc/flexdeep.html good luck! Dave Thomas NCTMB [ This Message was edited by: chirp on 2002-03-27 10:22 ]
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dustinap
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Mar 27, 2002, 6:27 PM
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I have absolutely no pain.
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chirp
Mar 27, 2002, 6:39 PM
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Then its probably just that due to extensive use, the fascia ( tissue surronding the muscles like a "body sock" ) has shortened and simply stretching and doing that forearm stroke...consistently over time will bring your fingers back to "normal". Pain is not required. Having them curl is not a problem but if they remain hypertonic for long periods and you get a small tear in the muscle, you are at higher risk for trigger points and other muscle ailments. If you know a massage therapist, have them work on you, its pretty awesome what we can do and how that translates to more power/less prone to injury.
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dustinap
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Mar 27, 2002, 7:28 PM
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Thanks, I appreciate the info!
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