Cheers.I'd like to go and see someone who is clued up about these things, but no climbing specialists in NE Scotland I know of.
Excellent, doing it remotely had not crossed my mind for some reason. I'll get in touch.
Quote from: SA Chris on November 16, 2022, 02:00:57 pmCheers.I'd like to go and see someone who is clued up about these things, but no climbing specialists in NE Scotland I know of.I’d really recommend Andy who specialises in Remote physio sessions.I’ve not had an in-person appointment in a long time and unless I could be bothered to drive to see him I wouldn’t go anywhere else for climbing physio. Caveat is that I do know him personally but it genuinely wouldn’t change my recommendation. He’s just great and being remote doesn’t detract from it in the slightest.He has great after care too. Generally I’ve had one appointment which leads to some kind of write up and plan. Then any questions I have are all dealt with via email.He makes cool splints too for climbing with pulley injuries.https://www.processphysiotherapy.co.uk/
Quote from: James Malloch on November 16, 2022, 03:20:03 pmQuote from: SA Chris on November 16, 2022, 02:00:57 pmCheers.I'd like to go and see someone who is clued up about these things, but no climbing specialists in NE Scotland I know of.I’d really recommend Andy who specialises in Remote physio sessions.I’ve not had an in-person appointment in a long time and unless I could be bothered to drive to see him I wouldn’t go anywhere else for climbing physio. Caveat is that I do know him personally but it genuinely wouldn’t change my recommendation. He’s just great and being remote doesn’t detract from it in the slightest.He has great after care too. Generally I’ve had one appointment which leads to some kind of write up and plan. Then any questions I have are all dealt with via email.He makes cool splints too for climbing with pulley injuries.https://www.processphysiotherapy.co.uk/Apparently also has a book coming out?! I had no idea. Looks ace. https://www.processphysiotherapy.co.uk/the-self-rehabbed-climber
I also got one of those splints when I saw this James guy in Sheffield. He did explain where he was getting them from but I can't remember, perhaps it was this guy. Quite possible it was which would be a great endorsement.Anyway, the splint seemed to really help. But this was my first pulley I jury so I've no reference point.
I've had my fair share of finger injuries including two ruptures. Best diagnosis is an ultrasound to identify whether and how much the tendon is lifting off the bone under load. For both, I've been wearing pulley ring 24/7 for min. four weeks. Pain in the ass and sore on the top of finger but helps a lot. I am actually at four weeks exactly today (seeing PT again on Monday so keeping on till then). Then wear pulley ring for min. four weeks after only when climbing. I have a pulley ring like the one in that video for 24/7 wear but a different, thermoplastic pulley ring: https://rocknsport.square.site/ for climbing. It's lower profile so doesn't get in the way but it doesn't leave much room for your veins at the side of finger.
I wear this 24/7: https://www.amazon.com/NiceClimbs-Pulley-Climbing-Finger-Splint/dp/B088MM4937Approx. half way down the page in purple is the pulley ring (with tape) I wear while climbing: https://www.unionpt.com/climbing-finger-pulley-injury/
Quote from: Coops_13 on November 17, 2022, 03:15:42 pmI've had my fair share of finger injuries including two ruptures. Best diagnosis is an ultrasound to identify whether and how much the tendon is lifting off the bone under load. For both, I've been wearing pulley ring 24/7 for min. four weeks. Pain in the ass and sore on the top of finger but helps a lot. I am actually at four weeks exactly today (seeing PT again on Monday so keeping on till then). Then wear pulley ring for min. four weeks after only when climbing. I have a pulley ring like the one in that video for 24/7 wear but a different, thermoplastic pulley ring: https://rocknsport.square.site/ for climbing. It's lower profile so doesn't get in the way but it doesn't leave much room for your veins at the side of finger.Judging by your power club posts I'd say you've had a lot more than your fair share!! Out of interest, have you ever injured the same pulley more than once?
Quote from: highrepute on November 17, 2022, 10:07:40 amI also got one of those splints when I saw this James guy in Sheffield. He did explain where he was getting them from but I can't remember, perhaps it was this guy. Quite possible it was which would be a great endorsement.Anyway, the splint seemed to really help. But this was my first pulley I jury so I've no reference point.The type Andy makes are in his video here:
Quote from: James Malloch on November 17, 2022, 12:47:09 pmQuote from: highrepute on November 17, 2022, 10:07:40 amI also got one of those splints when I saw this James guy in Sheffield. He did explain where he was getting them from but I can't remember, perhaps it was this guy. Quite possible it was which would be a great endorsement.Anyway, the splint seemed to really help. But this was my first pulley I jury so I've no reference point.The type Andy makes are in his video here: Yeah that's not the same. And the way it's used looks to be very different too.I thought voklers paper had shown that H taping was better for protecting A2 than taping over the actual pulley?
Flexor Pulley Splints follow the same principles of taping, but provide much more support. It is possible to wear them for hours at a time, even when climbing (at the appropriate stage of rehab). They allow for adequate blood flow to the finger whilst providing effective support.
Damn! First A2 in YEARS!Very mild, ring finger on my right hand. I suspect doing a max hangs test session to "see where I'm at" plus a short but intense boulder session after (just a couple of problems, limit stuff, maybe 10 attempts in total after a couple of slightly less full on boulders).Feels so mild/minor that I can probably take a short bit of rest and just avoid boning on it for a while but don't want to make it worse. My middle finger A2s are somewhat life-long chronically grumbly (and have a lump on the side of the RH one) but they never hurt while climbing, and generally get better with maintenance fingerboarding. Any thoughts non rehabbing a very mild, but definitely "new" A2.
Quote from: Fultonius on January 26, 2024, 09:10:35 amDamn! First A2 in YEARS!Very mild, ring finger on my right hand. I suspect doing a max hangs test session to "see where I'm at" plus a short but intense boulder session after (just a couple of problems, limit stuff, maybe 10 attempts in total after a couple of slightly less full on boulders).Feels so mild/minor that I can probably take a short bit of rest and just avoid boning on it for a while but don't want to make it worse. My middle finger A2s are somewhat life-long chronically grumbly (and have a lump on the side of the RH one) but they never hurt while climbing, and generally get better with maintenance fingerboarding. Any thoughts non rehabbing a very mild, but definitely "new" A2.6 sets of 30 second density lifts, 1 minutes rest with a 20mm edge, starting with whatever weight feels like 3/10 pain maximum and slowly build that weight up. I do these as part of my warmup now as it’s basically free prehab. I do density hangs into fingerboard hangs and then I’m ready to climb.
Quote from: Dingdong on January 26, 2024, 09:15:14 amQuote from: Fultonius on January 26, 2024, 09:10:35 amDamn! First A2 in YEARS!Very mild, ring finger on my right hand. I suspect doing a max hangs test session to "see where I'm at" plus a short but intense boulder session after (just a couple of problems, limit stuff, maybe 10 attempts in total after a couple of slightly less full on boulders).Feels so mild/minor that I can probably take a short bit of rest and just avoid boning on it for a while but don't want to make it worse. My middle finger A2s are somewhat life-long chronically grumbly (and have a lump on the side of the RH one) but they never hurt while climbing, and generally get better with maintenance fingerboarding. Any thoughts non rehabbing a very mild, but definitely "new" A2.6 sets of 30 second density lifts, 1 minutes rest with a 20mm edge, starting with whatever weight feels like 3/10 pain maximum and slowly build that weight up. I do these as part of my warmup now as it’s basically free prehab. I do density hangs into fingerboard hangs and then I’m ready to climb.I also did this, 30 second lifts. Every day, really low intensity, slowly built up. Worked a treat.
Quote from: Fultonius on January 26, 2024, 09:10:35 amDamn! First A2 in YEARS!Very mild, ring finger on my right hand. I suspect doing a max hangs test session to "see where I'm at" plus a short but intense boulder session after (just a couple of problems, limit stuff, maybe 10 attempts in total after a couple of slightly less full on boulders).Feels so mild/minor that I can probably take a short bit of rest and just avoid boning on it for a while but don't want to make it worse. My middle finger A2s are somewhat life-long chronically grumbly (and have a lump on the side of the RH one) but they never hurt while climbing, and generally get better with maintenance fingerboarding. Any thoughts non rehabbing a very mild, but definitely "new" A2.When did you notice initial symptoms?
I had a similarly minor sprain back in June. I went to Andy (Biscuit on here) - his advice was to tape it up and "mummify" the finger so that you can't half crimp on it. Open hand only when actually climbing. Then constant stretching and periodic open hand hangs to stimulate blood flow to the finger. Still took a few months before it felt okay (but then I was and still am in a state of chronic stress, so healing was pretty slow).