Did you mean: repetitive strain injury (condition), Relative strength index (abbreviation), ṛṣi (Asian Mythology), R-value (insulation), rishi, RSIS (abbreviation)
| Dictionary: repetitive strain injury |
| 5min Related Video: RSI |
| Computer Desktop Encyclopedia: RSI |
(Repetitive Strain Injury) Ailments of the hands, neck, back and eyes due to computer use. The remedy for RSI is frequent breaks which should include stretching or yoga postures. See carpal tunnel syndrome, Maltron keyboard, wrist rest, Nintendo thumb, iPod finger and repetitive brain injury.
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| Food and Fitness: repetitive strain injury |
An injury to soft tissues (especially tendons) caused by repeated use of a muscle or muscle group. RSI is a generic term for a whole group of overuse injuries including carpal tunnel syndrome, tendonitis, and tenosynovitis. These were once thought to be mainly the preserve of overenthusiastic exercisers. In fact, RSIs are so common in some sports that they have acquired a sporting epithet (for examples, see golfer's elbow and tennis elbow). In recent years there appears to have been an epidemic of RSIs not associated with sport: the British Trades Union Congress estimated that more than 200 000 people per year miss work because of the condition, and in 1992 the US Bureau of Labour Statistics reported 282 000 confirmed cases of RSI, a 26 per cent increase on the previous year. The increase has been linked to the advent of personal computers. Repetitive speed-typing on computer keyboards may result in pain and stiffness in the hands, wrists and arms. The pain may be so severe that sufferers cannot drive, or carry bags. In the UK, keyboard-induced RSI has been called Work Related Upper Limb Disorder by the Health and Safety Executive. A few physicians deny the existence of RSI and regard it as largely psychosomatic. However, most treat it in the same way as other overuse injuries, with rest, anti-inflammatories, physiotherapy and, in extreme cases, surgery.
| Measures and Units: RSI |
engineering The SI-expressed unit of thermal insulation corresponding to the earlier R value, i.e. expressed in terms of K·m2·W-1 instead of °F·ft2·h·Btu-1, the RSI value = 0.176~ × R value. Hence R12 becomes RSI 2.1, R20 becomes RSI 3.5.
| Sports Science and Medicine: repetitive strain injury |
An injury to soft tissues, especially tendons, due to repeated use of a muscle or muscle group. In an industrial setting, tenosynovitis of the forearm (colloquially called ‘teno') is often regarded as a repetitive strain injury to those tendons that pass through the forearm and cross the wrist to be inserted into the hand. Any activity involving frequent and repeated grasping (e.g. weight-lifting and rowing) may provoke a repetitive strain injury. See also de Quervain's disease, overuse injury.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: repetitive stress injury |
Treatment of RSI usually begins with attempts to change the conditions that caused the injury. Often, exercises and anti-inflammatory drugs are prescribed; in some cases surgery is necessary. Many workers' compensation cases and lawsuits relating to RSI have been brought against employers and product manufacturers. To avoid the high costs of RSI, some businesses have introduced ergonomic workstations and enforced rest periods.
| Health Dictionary: repetitive stress injury |
An injury, usually musculoskeletal in nature, that results from continual repetitive motion. There is continued debate about the extent of some of these injuries, exemplified by the continually evolving standards that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has set for their prevention. (See carpal tunnel syndrome.)
| Wikipedia: Repetitive strain injury |
| The neutrality of this article is disputed. Please see the discussion on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until the dispute is resolved. (February 2009) |
| Repetitive Strain Injury | |
|---|---|
| Classification and external resources | |
| DiseasesDB | 11373 |
| eMedicine | pmr/97 |
| MeSH | D012090 |
Repetitive strain injury (RSI), also known as Cumulative Trauma Disorder (CTD), occupational overuse syndrome, non-specific arm pain[1] or work related upper limb disorder (WRULD), any joint pain that is believed to be caused by chronic misuse of these body parts, for instance, while using a computer on the job. Conditions such as RSI tend to be associated with both physical and psychosocial stressors.[2]
Contents |
The following complaints are typical in patients that might receive a diagnosis of RSI:[3]
In contrast to carpal tunnel syndrome, the symptoms tend to be diffuse and non-anatomical, crossing the distribution of nerves, tendons, etc. They tend not to be characteristic of any discrete pathological conditions.
A 2008 study showed that 68% of UK workers suffered from some sort of RSI, with the most common problem areas being the back, shoulders, wrists, and hands.[4]
The physical examination discloses only tenderness and diminished performance on effort-based tests such as grip and pinch strength—no other objective abnormalities are present. Diagnostic tests (radiological, electrophysiological, etc.) are normal. In short, RSI is best understood as an apparently healthy arm that hurts. Whether there is currently undetectable damage remains to be established.
The term "repetitive strain injury" is most commonly used to refer to patients in whom there is no discrete, objective, pathophysiology that corresponds with the pain complaints. It may also be used as an umbrella term incorporating other discrete diagnoses that have (intuitively but often without proof) been associated with activity-related arm pain such as Carpal tunnel syndrome, Cubital tunnel syndrome, Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, DeQuervain's syndrome, Stenosing tenosynovitis/Trigger finger/thumb, Intersection syndrome, Golfer's elbow (medial epicondylosis), Tennis elbow (lateral epicondylosis), and Focal dystonia.
Finally RSI is also used as an alternative or an umbrella term for other non-specific illnesses or general terms defined in part by unverifiable pathology such as Reflex sympathetic dystrophy syndrome (RSDS), Blackberry thumb, disputed Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, Radial tunnel syndrome, "Gamer's thumb" (a slight swelling of the thumb caused by excessive use of a gamepad), "Rubik's wrist" or "cuber's thumb" (tendinitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, or other ailments associated with repetitive use of a Rubik's Cube for speedcubing), "Stylus Finger" (Swelling of the hand caused by repetitive use of mobile devices and mobile device testing.), "Raver's wrist", caused by repeated rotation of the hands for many hours (for example while holding glow sticks during a rave).
Although Tendinitis and Tenosynovitis are discrete pathophysiological processes, one must be careful because they are also terms that doctors often use to refer to non-specific or medically unexplained pain, which they theorize may be caused by the aforementioned processes.
Modifications of posture and arm use (ergonomics) are often recommended.[5]
Adaptive technology ranging from special keyboards, mouse replacements and pen tablet interfaces to speech recognition software might help improve comfort:
Pause software reminds the user to pause frequently and perform exercises while working behind a computer. One such program is Workrave, an open-source free program that assists in the recovery and prevention of Repetitive Strain Injury. The program frequently alerts user to take micro-pauses, rest breaks and restricts user to a predefined daily limit. A similar program is RSI reminder, by Rob Nebeker; the program is available as a widget (i.e., add-in) for the Google Desktop.
Switching to a much more ergonomic mouse, such as a Roller Mouse, vertical mouse or joystick, or switching from using a mouse to using a stylus pen with graphic tablet may provide relief, but in chronic RSI they may only result in moving the problem to a different area. Using a graphic tablet for general pointing, clicking, and dragging (i.e. not drawing) may take some time to get used to as well. Switching to a trackpad, which requires no gripping or tensing of the muscles in the arms may help as well. Inertial mice (which do not require a surface to operate) might offer an alternative where the user's arm is in a less stressful thumbs up position rather than rotated to thumb inward when holding a normal mouse. Also, since they do not need a surface to operate ("air mice" function by small, forceless, wrist rotations), the wrist and arm can be supported by the desktop or
Switching to a much more ergonomic keyboard layout such as Dvorak[citation needed] or Colemak may help.
Exotic keyboards by manufacturers such as DataHand, OrbiTouch, Maltron and Kinesis are available.
A number of medical treatments, including non-narcotic pain medications, braces, and therapy, exist although some doctors consider these to be palliative.[6][7](See Are Some RSI Cases Psychosomatic? below)
Exercise decreases the risk of developing RSI.[8]
Some researchers believe that, for the most difficult chronic RSI cases, the pain itself becomes less of a problem than the disruption to the patient's life caused by
They claim greater success from teaching patients psychological strategies for accepting the pain as an ongoing fact of life, enabling them to cautiously resume many day-to-day activities and focus on aspects of life other than RSI.[10]
Others disagree, emphasizing the importance of rest in achieving recovery. For instance, it has been claimed that recovery can take up to 8 months without performing activities that might exacerbate the symptoms, and that the affected joint should never be put under severe or constant stress.[citation needed]
| The neutrality of this section is disputed. Please see the discussion on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until the dispute is resolved. (August 2009) |
Studies have related RSI and other upper extremity complaints with psychological and social factors. A large amount of psychological distress showed doubled risk of the reported pain, while job demands, poor support from colleagues, and work dissatisfaction also showed an increase in pain, even after short term exposure.[11]
For example, the association of Carpal tunnel syndrome with arm use is commonly assumed but not well-established.[12] Typing has long been thought to be the cause of carpal tunnel syndrome,[13] but recent evidence suggests that, if anything, typing may be protective.[14] Another study claimed that the primary risk factors for Carpal tunnel syndrome were "being a woman of menopausal age, obesity or lack of fitness, diabetes or having a family history of diabetes, osteoarthritis of the carpometacarpal joint of the thumb, smoking, and lifetime alcohol intake."[15]
There are three common mechanisms, by which a normally functioning human mind increases pain and pain-related disability.
Some doctors and medical researchers believe that stress is the main cause, rather than a contributing factor, of a large fraction of pain symptoms usually attributed to RSI. The most famous advocate of this point of view, Dr. John E. Sarno, Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine at the New York University Medical School considers that RSI, back pain, and other pain syndromes, although they sometimes have a physical cause, are more often a manifestation of tension myositis syndrome, a psychogenic disorder in which stress causes the autonomic nervous system to reduce blood flow to muscles, causing pain and weakness.[23]
RSI shares many characteristics with known psychosomatic disorders:
A common theme among different subtypes of RSI is a stigmatization and demonization of hand use. Illness concepts that stigmatize hand use have the potential to create more illness as well-documented in the experience with the Australian RSI epidemic. [6] RSI was first diagnosed in Australia in the 1980s. (Only later was it diagnosed in the US and Britain.) In the early Australian experience, RSI cases increased rapidly over several years, leading to widespread media coverage and worker protests. After a widely publicized court case in which a judge ruled an alleged RSI victim had no bodily injury and could not receive damages, complaints dropped off rapidly. Many observers felt that the media coverage and social mobilization against the epidemic had actually helped spread it by causing psychosomatic symptoms in worried workers.[26] This pattern has been seen in other psychosomatic illnesses.[22]
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Did you mean: repetitive strain injury (condition), Relative strength index (abbreviation), ṛṣi (Asian Mythology), R-value (insulation), rishi, RSIS (abbreviation)
| iPod finger (technology) | |
| repetitive brain injury (technology) | |
| Nintendo thumb (technology) |
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