Sylmeister |
10-07-2013 10:21 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by jrosiebd
(Post 1019713)
anyone with rsd having issues with blood vessels popping up and hurting bad, I even have trigger thumb in right hand now, my doctor said I have to live with it
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Hi Rosie! I already have full body RSD, but originally it was right upper, arm and hand. I developed trigger finger in my right middle finger, about 5-6 years in. It's really annoying though not usually painful. I saw a hand specialist who refused to treat it because of the RSD. I honestly already knew traditional treatment was not going to be authorized by me, but wanted to see if he had any other suggestions. He walked me down to a hand OT who made a very light weight, flexible brace that attached with Velcro. ( It only survived about a year.) I was to only wear it off and on, and it did allow movement, just not full range of movement easily. You will find if you try your best to avoid a full range of movement, and not allow your thumb to snap and catch, you will over time, lessen any inflammation and lessen the trigger snapping. I've gotten into the habit of keeping that finger as straight as possible, and not using it, even when I grasp. I am sure that would be harder to do with your thumb. But the less you have it snap and catch, the less the frequency of it catching. Mine only catches every once in a while and when it starts, I pay more attention to trying to keep it from bending tight enough to catch. The OT I saw told me that the more it is used full extension and retraction, the more it will catch and not release...the tendons will not easily slid in the membrane that houses them.
Odd question just occurred to me, I got fibromyalgia, a little over two years into the RSD. fibromyalgia is the inflammation of the thin membrane that covers each muscle and forms tendons, attaching muscle to bone/joints. That's two inflammatory sites that involve tissue/membrane that houses soft tissue. Things that make you go hhhhmmmmm?
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