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Ask Dr. LJ (srsly)
So something went b'doink in a non-TMI region of my body. Coincidentally, I have a physical coming up in a couple of weeks. I am looking for confirmation that it's OK to wait for that, or if I should run-not-walk to the doctor's office to escalate this.
Since Saturday afternoon -- so, for three days now, without letup -- my right forearm has felt somewhat numb and rather painful, from elbow to fingertips. The pain recedes for several hours whenever I eat ibuprofen, but the numbness stays: an unpleasant tingle, especially on all the affected area's skin. It feels especially weird on the inner surfaces of my fingers.
The pain arrived in a sudden rush while I worked on Saturday, and has remained since. But I otherwise feel great, and my arm is fully functional, with no muscular weakness or anything. So: thoughts? Meh wait it out (with a doc appointment after two weeks), or holy shit, jmac, pick up the phone now?
Since Saturday afternoon -- so, for three days now, without letup -- my right forearm has felt somewhat numb and rather painful, from elbow to fingertips. The pain recedes for several hours whenever I eat ibuprofen, but the numbness stays: an unpleasant tingle, especially on all the affected area's skin. It feels especially weird on the inner surfaces of my fingers.
The pain arrived in a sudden rush while I worked on Saturday, and has remained since. But I otherwise feel great, and my arm is fully functional, with no muscular weakness or anything. So: thoughts? Meh wait it out (with a doc appointment after two weeks), or holy shit, jmac, pick up the phone now?
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You may want to try focusing on ero while working. You may need to stop typing/digiting at all for a few days.
But I am not a doctor.
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I'm voting for RSI, so there seems to be some consensus on that. I'm generally a believer that the best medicine is the delivery of as much nothing as possible, and given that a doc is unlikely to be able to do much for it except maybe give you a stronger anti-inflamatory waiting probably isn't going to do a lot of harm.
You might wanna talk to a (sane) chiropractor, although I'm not totally sure how you pick the sane ones from the crazies. I believe there is some association of non-wingnut chiropractors--the ones who focus on empirical results and ignore wack-job theories--but have no idea what it's called.
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"It's Not Carpal Tunnel Syndrome" is a good book, in the meantime.
If it were me, I'd probably try to get a sooner appointment with someone who could do something therapeutic (massage therp, PT, chiro, whatever); angry muscles get more difficult to appease the longer you leave them angry.
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