Carpal Tunnel Syndrome and Repetitive Stress Injuries Ways to Avoid
It and Work With It
A Rolfer’s perspective
By Siana Goodwin
Illustration by Peter
Anthony
Commentary by Jeff Burch
Published in Massage & Bodywork,
December/January 2003
On a
daily basis, massage therapists across the country assist their clients in the
prevention of, and recovery from, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) and related
repetitive stress injuries (RSI). Ironically, CTS also sharply limits and
sometimes ends the careers of many massage therapists. But it need not be so.
Let’s take a look at the anatomy and biomechanics of CTS and related syndromes,
and through our understanding of the structural and behavioral origins of this
disorder, find ways to prevent
it
from “impinging” on your
own
body.
Structurally,
three sides of the carpal tunnel are formed by carpal bones, and the fourth side
by a broad ligament. The bellies of the prime muscular movers of the hand lie
in the forearm. The force of these muscles is delivered to the hand by long
tendons. Eight of these tendons pass through the carpal tunnel, along with the
median nerve. If any one of these nine elements becomes slightly inflamed, it
puts pressure on all the other elements, resulting in more inflammation for all
members of the group. A vicious cycle begins.
Anti-inflammatory
medication may be useful, but it is difficult to deliver the pharmaceutical to
tendons because of their low vas-cularization. A surgical approach is to
lengthen the ligament forming the palmar boundary of the carpal tunnel, thereby
increasing the volume in the tunnel. This surgery is often quite successful,
but I believe prevention is preferable to surgical correction.
It’s
very common for people to refer to all RSIs of the hand and arm as “carpal
tunnel.” I have even heard injuries to the elbow being called “carpal tunnel in
the elbow.” The specific condition of CTS is an impingement of the activity of
the median nerve. Presence of CTS is identified by electromyography which
determines the conduction capacity of the nerve. Impingement of the nerve
results in pain and tingling in the hand, and muscle weakness in its intrinsic
muscles, especially the flexor and opponens pollicis. In severe cases of CTS,
these muscles atrophy.
There
are conditions that can precede the onset of CTS and these can also produce
symptoms of pain and numbness. Usually these are caused by prolonged muscle
tension resulting in the restriction of blood flow. When this occurs, not only
do muscles and nerves not receive the nourishment they need for repair, but the
removal of metabolites from normal muscle functioning is also lessened. The result
is edema of surrounding tissues and increased pressure and tension in the area.
Many RSI and CTS problems occur in a cycle of tension: restriction of blood
flow, edema and consequent further restriction of movement – all potentially
leading to severe problems.
The
muscle tension that’s part of RSI may be due to repetitive movement or it may
be a somato-emotional event resulting from psychological stress. In the long
cycle of micro-injury that produces symptoms of RSI, bodywork can be of great
help in reducing tension and edema, increasing blood flow and encouraging
different movements which may reduce or reverse painful symptoms.
• Minimize time spent with the hands in a
pronated position. Any degree of supination in your work is an improvement.
Study your body’s position while you work.
• Find keyboards which rise toward the
middle. Split keyboards also help.
• Move your hands down from the 10
o’clock and 2 o’clock positions on the steering wheel. Your hands will be more
supplanted the lower they are on the wheel.
• Keep your hands moving – frequent small
variations in hand position reduce repetitive strain.
• Find better ways to rest your hands.
When you are not working, let your hands rest palm up. This opens the space
between the ulna and radius, and reduces compression on the palmar surface of
the hand, wrist and forearm.
Rolfing
can be especially well-suited for this kind of work because of its emphasis on altering
patterns of movement and strain throughout the entire body, as contrasted to
working only for symptom relief. Rolfers are trained to consider the whole body
in looking for an overall pattern of tension or restriction in movement, of
which the complaint – RSI or some other condition – is one manifestation.
Thinking about the anatomy of the upper limb, for example, illustrates the
sense of this. In the hand, while there are numerous muscles that facilitate
finger movements (having origins and insertions only in the metacarpal and/or
phalangeal bones), the flexors and extensors of the digits and wrist have their
origins either in the bones of the forearm or the arm itself. The structural
relationship of the forearm to the arm is of course affected by the muscles
which cross the elbow. Now we can see a relationship between the muscles of the
wrist and those of the arm. The action of the muscles of the arm is also
affected by the position of the arm in its socket, relating to the muscles
which have origins in the scapula; their function is affected by the muscles
spanning between scapula and torso. (Readers familiar with Massage &
Bodywork columnist Tom Myers’ explanation of the “anatomy trains” in the body
will recognize a similar sequence here.)
From
another point of view, tracing the path of the nerve supply to the wrist and
hand through this overlapping complex of muscles back to the origins of the
brachial plexus in the neck will demonstrate that compression of the median
nerve (or radial or ulnar nerve) may occur at any point in its length. To the
eye of the Rolfer, a complaint of pain in the hand or wrist may have an origin
anywhere along this path. And the manner in which a Rolfer palpates and gathers
information from the body, through the web of fascia, can lead her to feel
connections related to the complaint, but perhaps distant from it. Two elements
are important in this equation: the connectivity of the tissue and the layering
of tissue in the body.
Anatomical
studies from the West emphasize the separation of muscles and tissues, and we
are prone to think of the body as being composed of separate parts stuck
together in some mysterious way. However, fascia is a continuous web throughout
the body, and it is possible to feel the connection between distant
restrictions through it. If a Rolfer or other bodyworker, instead of addressing
a tight muscle, can experience the corresponding patterns of tension in the
fascia, whole patterns of concurrent strain throughout the body will present
themselves. Simil-arly, the concept of working in the fascial web allows
distinctions within muscles, which appear in the concept of layers. Since
fascia surrounds not only the gross structures of muscles, organs and bones but
also muscle bundles, fasciculi and even individual muscle cells, it is possible
to develop a refined app-roach to working at layers of tissue. The body can be
experienced tactily, not only as a collection of muscles, but as infinite
layers of connective tissue, any one of which will contain not only muscle
fibers, but also portions of other fascially-encased structures. It’s not
unusual to find restrictions at a particular layer within the limb which may
not be present at other layers. For instance, the surface muscle tissue of the
wrist flexors may appear quite soft, easily compressible to the touch, but hard
at a deeper level. What we think of as a muscle that we could dissect from the
arm, often has differences in consistency within it. It is in layers of tissue
that the differences are felt.
1. Vary your tasks. Mix several
activities in the course of a day to reduce repetitive activity.
2. When performing a repetitive task,
frequently vary the way you are using your hands. Even small variations help.
3. Avoid working with your elbows bent at
an angle less than 90 degrees. Too much bend at the elbow compresses blood
vessels and nerves.
4. Spend most of the time with your
wrists in a near-neutral angle. Flexion puts strain on the carpal tunnel, but
extension places three times as much strain when the wrist is flexed.
5. Minimize time resting the wrists on
surfaces when the hand is in a palm-down position. This compresses the carpal
tunnel and other vulnerable structures.
6. Minimize time spent with the hand in a
palm-down position: thumb or palm up is better. The palm-down position
compresses tissues deep between the long bones of the forearm. If you must work
with the hand palm down, put your hand in the thumb-up position every moment
you can when you are on breaks or off-duty.
7. Minimize time spent contracting or
narrowing the palm of the hand (closing thumb and little finger together). This
position contributes directly to carpal tunnel pressure.
8. Let your shoulders and breathing be as
relaxed as possible in any task.
9. If you use a computer more than one
hour a day, then utilize two or three different mouse styles. Changing your
mouse at least every hour and making frequent, small adjustments in the angles
in your hand use on the keyboard will help reduce repetitive strain.
10. Get regular exercise. One factor
which may contribute to carpal tunnel is low cardiovascular condition of the
body, as not enough blood circulates in the hand area to support a high level
of activity in the hands.
11. If you use your hands on the job,
choose leisure activities which do not use the hands. Play soccer rather than
racquet sports. Sing rather than play the guitar.
It was
my background as a Rolfer, in looking for overall patterns in the body, and in
experiencing the body in fascial layers, that allowed me to make some
connections between different phenomena I observed while working at Starkey
Laboratories in Eden Prairie, Minn. Starkey – one of the world’s largest
manufacturers of custom hearing aids – was plagued with a high number of
repetitive stress injuries, including carpal tunnel syndrome. My job was to
reduce their employee incidence of RSI. When I first started, I assumed it to
be entirely a problem of the wrist, since that is where the median nerve
supplying the muscles of the hand is most vulnerable. But as I worked and
studied more, I found a variety of different factors were at play in the
injuries people were suffering.
While
many of the employees had pain and numbness of the hand or fingers associated
with RSI, each had different kinds of jobs. Some were office workers who used
computer keyboards, while others were technical workers involved in
manipulating small objects by hand or with tools, often kneading or squeezing
compressible material or constantly moving their hand between pronation and
supination within a small range of movement. In addition, many of these latter
employees worked in a confined posture, while constantly gazing into a
microscope.
As a
result of my work, I found the following conditions also in-volved in
complaints that qualified as RSI syndromes:
• Tension in the cubital and proximal flexor compartment associated with continuous flexion of the elbow and sometimes associated with repeated movement between pronation and supination.
I
consider this to be overworking of the biceps, especially irritation of the
distal tendon, from continual small movements. From the view-point of fascial
consideration, disturbances or stresses within fascial structures may also be
important factors in RSI. Tension can be created in the fascia of the flexor
compartment because of the attachment of the distal biceps tendon. Besides
attaching directly to the radius, it also spreads out into the flexor fascia in
an aponeurosis. If we consider that tension in the fascia can create stress on
muscles, it is possible tension in the biceps attachment can produce tension in
the fascia to which it is attached. This may contribute to tension in the
overall flexor compartment.
• Restriction of supination.
Most
work with the hands is done from a pronated position. One of the observations
of Rolfing is that when a particular position is maintained, so that muscles
have a repetitive pattern of contraction, surrounding fascia changes to support
the muscle contraction. It often becomes inflexible so that the muscle is
unable to return to a lengthened, resting state. In the case of repetitive
motion of the hands and arms, this shortening in the pronators of the forearm
leads to a condition where the forearm, even when relaxed, is always in partial
pronation. This can easily be seen when a person is lying supine, with arms at
the sides, and the forearm rests with the thumb pointing vertically, rather
than laterally.
A
further problem with this condition is that when the forearm is pronated or
partially pronated, the interosseous space is compressed, and in pronation the
wrist and finger flexor muscles are also compressed. Since the median nerve
lies deep in the tissue of these muscles, this kind of squeezing may create
additional pressure on the nerve proximal to the carpal tunnel. As the muscle
shortening impedes the ability of the forearm to fully supinate, continual
contraction of the interosseous fibers also impedes their ability to fully
extend and allow the arm to come into supination. (See the sidebar for working
with this problem)
•
Over-contraction of the opponens and flexor pollicis; contraction of the
palmar fascia, particularly at the retinaculum of the wrist; and compression of
the carpal joints, particularly the trapezium-scaphoid.
These
conditions were most common to workers whose jobs required gripping and
manipulating small objects. Again, the repeated contraction of muscles results
in an inability for the muscle to return to a full resting state. The
appearance of the hand when these conditions are present is that the space
across the base of the hand, between the ends of the first and fifth
metacarpals, seems narrow – the hand cannot open wide. The thumb and little
finger may look as though they’re moving toward each other. Sometimes the palm
seems to have a little valley in it at the center of the wrist.
The
fascia of these intrinsic muscles of the hands is continuous with the thicker
fascia that forms the roof of the carpal tunnel, the retinaculum of the wrist.
As with the condition of tension in the bicipital aponeurosis in the forearm,
continuous tension in the muscle contributes to inelasticity in the retinaculum,
as well as an actual narrowing of the space of the carpal tunnel.
We don’t usually consider the mo-bility of the carpal bones as a factor in repetitive strain, since their mobility is relatively limited. How-ever, the gliding joints between these small bones provide the flexion, extension and rotational movement of the wrist. When movement in the wrist is limited, and muscles and fascia begin to lose their elasticity, this gliding property of the joints can be irrecoverable, as their surfaces jam and fluidity in the joint is reduced. It is also important to remember the bones of the wrist form the “floor” of the carpal tunnel. We generally think of trauma in this area resulting from compression within the tunnel by inflammation of tendons; it is a bit of a leap to consider that restriction in the “roof” of the tunnel, the retinaculum, may also be a factor. It’s an even bigger leap to think restriction in the floor might also be a problem, but I believe, at the very least, mobility in the wrist bones helps with the problem of fluid movement in this area, which can help diminish inflammation and edema, precursors to more serious repetitive strain problems.
• Tension
in thumb extensors, sometimes resulting in pressure on the radial nerve.
This
was an unusual condition, only appearing in people whose jobs demanded
repetitive use of a wide, rather than a narrow grip. Pres-enting complaints
were numbness in the wrist and hand on the dorsal side. Obviously, this would
indicate some difficulty with the radial nerve supply, rather than the median
or ulnar nerves. The problem, again, was often in the compression of fascial
structures associated with tendons – in this case, the tendons of the extensor
pollicis muscles. The dorsal surface of the forearm would often have a peculiar
flattening of the tissue approximately two inches above the wrist, where these
muscles would be in continuous contraction.
• Tension in the neck and shoulders, and anterior movement of the scapula on the ribcage.
Neck
and shoulder tension in our society is so common we seldom think of it as
anything other than just a condition of living. However, whenever I found
another condition of muscle tension that seemed to be a precursor to serious
RSI problems, I always found neck and shoulder tension. For the majority of
people I worked with, this kind of tension was exacerbated by their working
position which demanded the head be inclined forward. While it is possible for
typists to alter the position of their keyboard and computer monitors, it was
not, at least initially, possible for people who worked with microscopes to do
so. Over the course of the years I worked at Starkey, various changes were made
in the microscope mounting systems that allowed workers to maintain a more
upright posture.
Before
these changes were made, working to relieve tension in the neck and shoulder
girdle was critical. When you consider the roots of the nerves in the arms and
hands are in the lower cervical vertebrae, it’s easy to see why it’s important
to have free movement and release of muscle tension in the neck. I also found
it was import-ant to work with restrictions in the shoulder girdle. Continuous
forward inclination of the head compresses the upper ribs, often shortening
pectoralis minor and encouraging the scapula to slide forward on the ribcage.
This increases the chances of compression of the brachial plexus near its
origin site.
Dealing with incomplete supination is one
example of how the Rolfing perspective allowed me to work with, as well as
speculate about, the variety of conditions associated with CTS and RSI.
The approach I took was based on two
precepts I hold in Rolfing: 1) movement allows for both release and re-education
– manipulation with movement is more effective than manipulation alone; and 2)
using the idea of planes of fascia, we can access deep structures indirectly by
working anywhere in the plane of the deep structures.
When the forearm doesn’t completely supinate, I consider both the lack of complete relaxation in the pronators and the probable tension in the inter-osseous membrane. It seems inefficient to try to affect the interosseous membrane by direct pressure through the muscle tissue of the forearm. However, one can access tissue deep to the flexor compartment by sliding under the edge of the flexor compartment along the medial ulnar shaft. If the client slowly pronates and supinates the forearm while I continue to apply direct pressure along this plane between the flexor compartment and the bone, a deep release can be felt. Additionally, relatively light pressure can also be directed across the body of the pronator teres, which allows that muscle to come to more complete relaxation when it is not being actively used.
I generally will have my client move into
pronation at the start of the movement, then slightly increase pressure as the
movement goes toward supination. An increase in intensity of the preferred
position at the beginning of the movement allows a greater contrast to the
feeling of supination, and as the movement is repeated with the practitioner’s
hands working with the tissue, the sensation of movement and the contrast
between pronation and supination act to educate the neuro-myofascial system
into a new balance. Just a few repetitions of movement will bring about a
significant increase in the movement of supination.
Management
of repetitive stress is critical to all those who make a living with their
hands. Massage therapists and bodyworkers are in the peculiar position of both
needing to protect their hands and of assisting others in resisting the effects
of RSI. A thorough understanding of the anatomy involved in RSI and the factors
that contribute to stress are important for the practitioner, both for
well-being and therapeutic effectiveness. For the practitioner, working in ways
that minimize pressure on vulnerable tissues helps keep the strain to a
minimum. In treating others, being aware that symptoms of RSI caused by restrictions
anywhere in the fascial and neural chains can lead to more thorough treatment.
RSI is the result of a combination of factors, and these factors must be taken
into consideration – for both the health of the practitioner and the client.
Siana
Goodwin has
been a practicing Rolfer since 1980. From 1992-98, she worked with Starkey
Laboratories, Inc. to reduce RSI incidence through Rolfing. Within one year,
the company had reduced its workers’ compensation costs by 87% and currently
maintains that reduction. She is a mentor to new Rolfers and teaches workshops
in working with RSI and in Rolfing processes. For information about her work,
e-mail
sbg49@earthlink.net or call
612/722-0049. Jeff Burch’s website is www.jeffreyburch.com
Cailliet,
R., Hand pain and impairment, Edition 4, 1994 F.A. Davis, ISBN 0-8036-1619-8.
Cailliet,
R., Neck and arm pain, Edition 3, 1991 F. A. Davis, ISBN 0-8036-1610-4.
Lester,
B., The Acute Hand, 1999 Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-8385-0258-X.
Wilson,
F. R., The Hand, 1998 Random House, ISBN 0-679-41249-2.
The
article is published at this website www.somatics.de
with kind permission of the publisher and the authors. Please respect their
copyright.
Back to the professional
article collection