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Any advice from the (finger) agony aunts? (Read 20038 times)

andy_e

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Arse. I've re-injured my finger, on the very same pocket no less. Only this time it's more serious... out comes the ice...

bedrock

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now that was silly going back to the offending pocket  ;)

I managed to re-injure mine by getting kicked by a cow I was trying to roll.....DOH!


andy_e

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Kicked by a cow as you were trying to roll?  :o ::) :-\

I nkow it was the same pocket, I REALLY do want to tick the problem though... the nemesissy bastard.

bedrock

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yes...I was rolling it to get one of its stomachs back on the correct side as it had moved to the wrong side   8)

all in a days work experience at the vets  ;D

andy_e

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Ah, you see that makes sense. I thought you were trying to roll underneath the cow, or trying to tip it or something!  ;)

grimer

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I went to the 'Bodies' exhibition in London this weekend, where the German guy has peeled back the skin off cadavers to show our workings. Really struck by the tendons in the hand, those skinny little strings that we put under so much stress. No wonder they give up sometimes.

Pemb

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Mine seem to be giving up all the time at the moment!

Since I started climbing again five months ago I've had five really bad A2 injuries, all in different fingers. As soon as I recover and can do some light climbing on one, another finger gets injured. I know these types of injuries are common in climbers but this is getting beyond a joke!

I warm up well, drink lots of water and take a Chondroitin and Glucosamine supplement. However, I have put on a few stone since I last climbed reguarly and my joints do hyperextend quite a lot. Could this be the problem or am I just climbing's Chris Kirkland?

And will all these injuries affect my finger strength long-term? I remember reading a bit of research on this by Steve Bollen or someone but can't remember the conclusion.

Cheers dudes
« Last Edit: May 04, 2006, 12:14:02 am by Pemb »

lorentz

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Sigh....

Bloody crimpy sit starts! Common complaint it would seem. Got that freaky audible pop in my right annular (ring) finger yesterday - first section above the hand. Is this the legendary A2 strain I've been reading so much about?

 Because it didn't hurt at first I thought maybe it was a joint popping  thing and carried on with some tape until it did hurt. Schoolboy error... it's really sore today. So then

1) Rest followed by real light training/ theraband rehab and strapping once pain stops and swelling goes down - see how it goes.

2) Ice and potentially contrast baths further down the road.

3) Glucosamine.

4) Ibuprofen gel

5) STOP IF IT POPS!



Great knowledge in this thread, folks. It's good to know y'all been thru it too. Are you all fighting fit again now or does it still niggle? Anymore advice/knowledge yo? Why does it tend to be the ring finger? What causes the pop? Have I ruptured the tendon or merely strained it. Any knowledge about long term damage to finger strength also appreciated.

Sorry to resurrect an old thread, but new to this tendon injury thing.

Gutted because I warmed up well, and have been totally psyched recently. Just started to move my lazy ass of a grade plateau where I'd been stuck for a looong time.

Cheers. Out.

fatdoc

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just wanna add some more therapies to the potential list for you all here

(BTW that piccie of the finger earlier on is the shit, nice one)

- cross frictioning whilst the finger is numbed by ice; best done by a sports physio type
- ultrasound again by the above (not in vogue at present - but helped me in the past)


- at last but not least is steriod injections!!!!! few drs can / will do them... you need a real experienced sports doc - they work, esp in cases that wont get better due to excessive scaring. - yes if repeated they can be dangerous, but refractory cases do occur and its that or an operation (that has a really low success rate). the only dr. i ever trusted to inject me  - i've had 3 - is now the dr. for a major premiere league FC....... if i had 4 months of banana finger again with severe pain i would travel the length of the country to see him!!!

Monolith

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Oh Bollocks. I've finally arrived at part of the forum I swore never to have to visit.

Fell off at Ysgo, took a bit of tumble and my middle finger got some sort of crushing amid the chaos. I should see a doctor, but haven't yet. I can't bend my middle finger, so that the fingernail section touches the base of the finger. It feels a very strange, stiff sort of pain and feels worrying (maybe because I never really get injured and dont know the pains some seem to encounter often).

Should I follow the icing protocol outlined within the thread, or just get off my arse and see a doctor? I've been told by a nurse I met that it wasn't broken, and hence thought I'd seek some info from the tendon bashing brigade. Is swelling around the knuckle coupled with the aforementioned inability to touch the base of the finger indicative of a tendon problem?

Thanks in advance.

fatdoc

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you do not have a clear mechanism of injury here.

twated, crushed by your falling mass (meant non weightist), twisted on landing, hyperextended, hyperflexed or plain old normal *ping* either on a pocket or an edge (will usually be a differne tpart of the pulley mechanism )..... rarely a full on tendon in the forearm rupture

can tell me were the pain is and what exactly happened??

I had sooooo many finger injuries I reckon wothout seeing it i'll still be able to confer some informal advice

Monolith

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Good to have a resident doc fatdoc!

I sort of slipped off the mat backwards and was a bit too busy trying to protect my head. I think i just put my hand out and a lot of weight was transferred through to it. Is it possible I have just bruised the digit? I bloody hope so, the injury department terrifies me!
Try as I might, I just cannot get the finger tip to meet base of finger. About 1 and a halfcm from doing so. And not neccessarily because of pain, I just can't physically do it.

Hmmm, what to do doc?

cofe

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I use contrast baths

that's good enough for me.

fatdoc

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OK


forget the usual bouldering / climbing induced over use pulley strains... cos you've not done that.

Most likely is a hyerextension injury (TOO far back), less so the hyper flexion (crushed into your palm).

if it really doesnt hurt much then you've not got a hairline fracture.... that's obvious really


BUT



if its truly *stuck* you could have a button hole fracture, where the *slips* either side of any of the fingerr interphalangeal joints "pop" leaving an irriducible fracture...


so, is really painless on forced movement??  if so IMO (which is supposition i.e; i'm not medically tied to this diagnosis professionally - truly sorry- it's the medicolegal world we live in) you just twated it. hard.

if it hurts on forced movement...... go to A&E before work in the morning (shortest wait) and you'll end up with an xray.... any bother and shout the house down that you're a national class climber and you bloody want it sorting

If A&E either not needed or negative then:regular analgesics, rest.... err.... quite a lot of rest actually..... and if peristantly swollen in 1 week cold therapy time. no resolution in 2 weeks = sports physio.


hyperextension injuries are most often seen in cricket. average time to get back to the crease is









at least 4 weeks.





sorry.... is that explanation OK??

Monolith

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Fantastic, thanks doc. It does hurt when I try to get it to meet, so I'll nip down to A&E in the morning before anyone has chance to hurt themselves. I'll try the ice pack and rest too. Taping neccessary at any stage or best left alone? It's been a week tomorrow that I did it, so maybe time for ice?

Thanks once more

fatdoc

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taping seems to have gone out of vogue in my (4 year) abscene from climbing.

there is no evidence for this as far as i can find...

i tape my middle 2 fingers, figure of eight pattern (so both pulleys covered) all the time - well you know - when climbing. If you dont understand can you remember how richie P used to tape?? - like that..

i cut it off, not peel... my tendons are a bit achey after a session and it hurts to pull on them; i'm old and massively injured in days gone by...

A&E will most likely be negative - but you need to be sure mate  - good luck.


Monolith

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A&E will most likely be negative.

A negative response? Thanks hombre, I appreciate the advice.

fatdoc

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negative as in no button hole fracture..... remember the NHS knows nothing about musculoskeleto disorders from sport... but if you have a fracture you will be sorted out...


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Hi fatdoc,

I managed to bend my fingers backward in a big way last Thursday (hyperextension?).  Ironically I got them caught in a door handle at the Foundry. I've been following the usual ice, ibuprofen, no climbing routine and I'm a serial abuser of glucosomine/chrondroitin and cod liver oil.

Five days later things are going OK but If I try hard to extend my ring finger without assistance I get a pain in top of the first finger joint.

Any idea what the damage is?  Is it a ligament/tendon thing or could I have damaged the cartilage? What's typical in hyperextension cases?




Timatron

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Haven't a clue how to quote stuff, but fatdoc said:  "remember the NHS knows nothing about musculoskeleto disorders from sport"

I'm an NHS physio, and myself and most of my colleagues are highly knowledgable about sports injuries.  Also, especially these days because of the current jobs crisis in physiotherapy, most physios have already graduated from previous higher education qualifications that are usually sport related.

fatdoc

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Haven't a clue how to quote stuff, but fatdoc said:  "remember the NHS knows nothing about musculoskeleto disorders from sport"

I'm an NHS physio, and myself and most of my colleagues are highly knowledgable about sports injuries.  Also, especially these days because of the current jobs crisis in physiotherapy, most physios have already graduated from previous higher education qualifications that are usually sport related.

fair that you are trained. i have no axe to grind here at all........ and those physios interested in sports injuries are on the whole multiple educated.... how much funding does your PCT give the secondary healthcare provider to get the prompt (< one week referral) to give rapid, timely and much needed treatment??


SFA i imagine. it's not a funding priority. If you pay for sports physio / sports massage / sports docs on the whole you get a damn good service.

there are the trained personel, esp in physio...... but the NHS does not fund the whole concept in any way as to call it a national service.

getting an appt 6 weeks after spraining your ankle is not the way to run a sport service, i'm sure we agree on that....... a 7 day new patient wait is the longest that I would consider acceptable.

If you work in a trust that has that facility let us all know... with patient choice we'll be be asap!


Hi fatdoc,

I managed to bend my fingers backward in a big way last Thursday (hyperextension?).  Ironically I got them caught in a door handle at the Foundry. I've been following the usual ice, ibuprofen, no climbing routine and I'm a serial abuser of glucosomine/chrondroitin and cod liver oil.

Five days later things are going OK but If I try hard to extend my ring finger without assistance I get a pain in top of the first finger joint.

Any idea what the damage is?  Is it a ligament/tendon thing or could I have damaged the cartilage? What's typical in hyperextension cases?

Again medical advice over the web is usually a disaster....... and as such this a general recommenadtion not de facto medical advice:

if you cant actively move through the whole range of the finger's movement with that mechanisism of injury you need to get it seen to......... one of the 2 extensor tendons that pass over and insert in that joint could have been stretched to failure. It's an A&E job i'm afriad. If you are local to sheff and there is a possibility of such occuring the northern general has a plastics dept. that is very good with hand stuff.
(go the the northern A&E earl in the day - you will be classed as low priority and have to wait bloody ages i'm afraid)






Monolith

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Went to A&E this afternoon. Very fast turnaround and the x-ray showed no break or fracture. Apparently its just an ibru and ice jobby and its the swelling preventing the full tip to palm movement. Thanks for your quality advice fatdoc.

fatdoc

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that's bloody good news mate  :great:

should be a minor layoff only then!

Monolith

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I ope so! Any idea on how long it takes for swelling to go down? Been a week and no improvement really. Maybe another two weeks off before resuming climbing activity?

Timatron

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No offence was taken fatdoc, I was just a bit taken aback by the statement that's all.  I totally appreciate your comments, and it's true regards to priorty.  I think the turn around in my outpatient's department (I work in orthopeadics inaptients at the moment) can be as fast as 7 days, however, you've got to remember that thousands of people get treated every year, so sometimes there's a back log.

The basic role of NHS physiotherapy is to get people back to where they were prior to their 'present complaint'.  Obviously, with sports people (and remember I'm one of them so I do understand) the work required would often be so intense and time consuming that it is best left to the patient finding a specialist.

Also, in my experience, many sports people expect a quick fix, which a physio (or anyone else) just can't provide.  Most of the time the answer really is rest, rest and more rest.  Sometimes with a bit of cryotherapy etc. thrown in for good measure, although none of these things are actually 'proven' to speed up recovery times.  So, often getting a quick appointment won't make any difference anyway.

Finally, we work with some seriously 'f*cked up' people who often will be suffering in ways you just can't imagine, for the rest of their lives.  When you see people unable to walk, wash, breath on their own after an accident it kind of puts a finger strain/sprain into perspective.  That's not to say we don't care, I have a finger strain at the moment and it's driving me round the bend, and I'd always do my best to help someone with a similar problem.  However, you must be able to see why most NHS physios aren't going to lose any sleep over a climber's gammy finger.

That's my perspective anyway.  I'm not trying to diminish any climber's suffering as a result of injury. When it's a big part of your life, it's really hard, and scary when you can't do it.  I just thought it might be interesting to see the other side of the coin.  Any feedback would be interesting.  Don't ask me any advice, because all I'll tell you to do is exactly what I'm doing - REST.  You can always train other things like the other hand, the unaffected fingers, pull up strength, front levers etc. etc.

Oh yeah, and there are some really sh*t physio's out there too.  I remember, before I trained, I went to see one (a sports physio ironically enough) and she was hopeless.  Told me my shoulder injury was all down to my posture!!  She didn't even ask how I'd done it!!  If she'd known it had happened while cranking out some one arm chin-ups she might have realised that posture was nothing to do with it!!

Adios!!

 

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