Finger Strength and Arthritis
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I'm 44 years old and I've been in the building trades for 20+ years. It's kept me in pretty good shape generally, but has been hard on the body too. |
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I'm quite a bit younger then you, but considering there is a 60 year old man climbing 5.14a I doubt you need to accept only the lower hanging fruit. |
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Voltaren Gel. Ask your doctor about it - it's prescription and comes in a tube like toothpaste. I'm 67 and this is the best thing I have found for my arthritic hands. |
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Chris Rice wrote:Voltaren Gel. Ask your doctor about it - it's prescription and comes in a tube like toothpaste. I'm 67 and this is the best thing I have found for my arthritic hands.thnx, i think the 'kids' advice was not for the age group. Extensive plastic pulling at a more advanced age may not have the positive results., the OP is looking for buyer beware , know your audience.... |
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Jacob, there isn't much swelling yet as you'd imagine with arthritis. Maybe a little in the large knuckle of the middle fingers, which are also the most painful. I've not seen a doctor nor can I afford it. But I'm pretty sure it's pre-arthritis. It's just different than ordinary fatigue that everyone is familiar with. |
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Good and thoughtful response, Doug. |
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Chris Rice wrote:Voltaren Gel. Ask your doctor about it - it's prescription and comes in a tube like toothpaste. I'm 67 and this is the best thing I have found for my arthritic hands.This stuff does work. I have done quite a bit of building myself and while is does affect fingers/arthritis, other factors come into play here. Genetics can be one... Sad to say, but climbing just under your limit and having really good technique, as mentioned above, really works wonders. Good footwork always helps finger strength ! |
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john strand wrote:Good footwork always helps finger strength !+1 I'm 54 and found this to be so true !! |
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john strand wrote: Good footwork always helps finger strength !And the key to great footwork is often really strong fingers. (a quip I heard long ago from an old school climber who was sending vertical v10 in his late 40s) |
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Stretch your fingers all the time every time. (do it now) |
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Pnelson wrote: And the key to great footwork is often really strong fingers. (a quip I heard long ago from an old school climber who was sending vertical v10 in his late 40s)I first heard this one about John Bachar- "wow, what great footwork!" YA and really fucking strong fingers ! |
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Doug S wrote:I'm 44 years old ... The obstacle seems to be my finger strength,... ThanksEverybody seems to think they just need more finger strength. And yet the feet and legs take 90+% of a person's weight, more so on less-than-vertical terrain. Perhaps one can improve their footwork by 5% and reduce the finger load by 50%? It's not as sexy as showing incredible finger-arm power, but it works. So, why not focus on learning to use the feet, legs, hips, and trunk more effectively? Shift to lower-angle, yet still difficult, stuff. On overhanging terrain, learn how to use the lower body to shake out and rest the fingers. In the meantime, get into a long-term habit of regular finger therapy. |
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Doug S, and John, |
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A rather simplified explanation of arthritis i think. |
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Sanllan wrote:Stretch your fingers all the time every time. (do it now) Make it a habit, make it a twitch When pooping...Stretch while reading this...Stretch going to grab an apple?...Stretch Making love to your gal?...pause and Stretch While thanking god fore a meal...Stretch If people around you start to get annoyed...you are doing it right.STRECH EVERYTHING AND HANDS/FINGERS And CORE strength ~ CENTRAL BACK, Neck, Technique/ foot work is dependent on the large muscle masses working together, |
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Robert Hall wrote:Doug S, and John, Basically arthritis is inflammation of cartilage in the joins leading to weakening and 'degradation destruction' of said cartilage. Cartilage acts as sort of a "semi-flexable lubricant" for the joints, when it's gone it's gone and then you have bone-on-bone motion. Drugs like Voltaren (or its oral equivalent diclofenac, and other oral anti-inflammitories like Aleve (Naproxin), Advil (Ibuprofen) and asprin, reduce this inflammation and pain, and MAY slow the degradation. But what's been weakened is weakened. Building up the muscles around the joint helps strengthen the joint, and stretching helps too (try stretches in warm water first thing in the morning), but be careful of doing "too much too fast" in the 'strengthening area'. Also check the PRECAUTIONS issued with Voltaren Gel which, of importance to the climber, are: don't use on skin with cuts or abrasions [ what climber's hands do you know that don't have "cuts or abrasions"]. The reason for this one is PROBABLY that the gel MAY increase permeation through the abrasion/cut of bacteria on the skin. All that being said, and precautions taken, Voltaren gel seems worth a try. Looking at the statistics in the package insert ("Google "Voltaren Gel" and read "precautions") it seems that there was not an overwhelming number of patients who saw improvement, but the blood levels were MUCH lower than in the oral dosage administration; so if it works for your hands and you don't need to take a lot or oral drugs, that's a good thing. Doug S - I'd highly recommend a doctor's consult and he/she will probably want an X-Ray to confirm. Find one that specializes in arthritis, explain your financial situation (i.e. no insurance) and maybe offer to pay cash; sometimes understanding doctors will drop their price (in exchange for not needing to bill insurance). Otherwise, there may be a free, or pay-as-much-as-you-can, clinic in your city or nearby. I'm 69, retired from pharmaceutical development/quality control and have had this problem for about 3 yrs now. But advice from another, older climber is worth repeating here: "Keep Climbing !"Volteran Gel was recommended to me by one of my climbing partners who is an MD. I don't use it all the time by any means - only when I have a flare up. Otherwise I train appropriately - hard at times - moderate at times and easy at times - rest and therapeutic work at times. Oh I'm 67 and have been climbing 32 years now. |
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I'm in my 20's so not sure if I should really be allowed to chime in here but seems like there is some good advice so I figured I'd throw my two cents in. Hope this helps! -RS |
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Ryan- you can wear that stuff at clubs too... Right? |
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Following for my own benefit... I was diagnosed with arthritis in the fingers a few years back. (31 YO now). I started crack climbing as a way to lay off the fingers yet still climb. For me constantly flexing the joints outwards throughout the day combined with warm water in the mornings helps make it a bit more manageable. Climbing more cracks instead of face was probably the bigger impact though.... |
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Until your start harder and thinner cracks ! Then your fingers fall off |