Sports and Computers
there is no difference
Repetitive Strain Injury
strains, sprains, cramps, and repetitive stress injury
Overuse of muscles and tendons in certain areas of the body could cause a repetitive injury. This could be related to your occupation or a leisure activity that you frequently engage in.
Yes it can if you don't type so much on the computer
A fracture caused by repeated injuries or repeated motions, which would not have occurred with a single injury, would be called a repetitive stress injury. Some examples of repetitive stress injuries are pitcher's elbow and carpal tunnel syndrome.
A stress fracture is considered a chronic injury as it develops over time due to repetitive stress on the bone rather than a sudden trauma. It typically occurs as a result of overuse or repetitive activity without allowing the bone enough time to heal.
Stress fracture
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is a repetitive stress injury (which is to say, stress builds up when you do the same kind of motion over and over) and it has nothing to do with arthritis which is a degenerative illness (the body is wearing out with age).
There is no difference, repetitive stress injury and repetitive strain injury are the same thing. It is some time known as RSI which is an abbreviation that works for both. It also has other names, some of which include: occupational overuse syndrome (OOS) cumulative trauma disorder (CTD) work related upper limb disorder (WRULD) and non-specific arm pain. The main reason that there is such confusion over the name is that it is not actually a specific disorder but rather an umbrella term for many localized injuries or conditions.
carpal tunnel syndrome
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome