Just wanted to get some opinions from others who may have had this issue...
A couple of months ago, I began feeling numbness in my picking hand, along with some burning sensation pain on the inside of my arm, just below the elbow. I've talk to my physician about it, and one of the things recommended is 'limit my time doing certain activities that are causing this pain'. Ok, that includes playing gypsy jazz with a bent wrist, and avoiding resting my arm slightly on the top of my guitar as I've done for years. I actually had to stop playing for a bit for the pain to go away, but once I started, it came back. So, to avoid further injury, I'm playing with more of a flat-wrist to give my carpal tunnel the max amount of room to keep from hurting so much. Also, have made some changes to my work area, where I use a computer/mouse daily for my work. All helps a bit, but I can't play for more than about 20 minutes before the pain comes back. I can't even play my jazz guitar, an L-5 copy, without having pain - so, I don't use it at all.
Now, I'm 58 and I realize I'm not going to be playing professionally again, but I really do enjoy playing my guitars. So, are there other 'old-timers' who have had this issue and gotten by it with some 'magic'?
The doc says to get an elbow pad used to help with tennis elbow, so I'll get one to try out. Any other suggestions? (be kind - I'm not going to quit playing. I already have lost 95% of my hearing, and that doesn't stop me - thanks to digital hearing aids.) I don't want to cause further injury, so I am already limiting my playing time. Thanks for listening folks. ;-)
Comments
I guess the neck dimensions and scale length screwed around with my fretting arm and wrist. The symptoms were akin to tennis elbow.
I skipped most of the stuff my orthopedist first recommended like shots and such. Instead, I went to a physical therapist who showed me certain muscle stretching techniques and the use deep tissue massage. The main thing was keep the main nerve running down the arm into the wrist straightened out and flexible.
That worked great!
I still stretch out a bit and press on pressure points the way the therapist did and haven't had a problem since. If you have health coverage that covers a therapist, I recommend going that route before drugs or worse, some sort of permanent damage results.
Anyway, hope this might help and I hope you start feeling better soon.
Best,
+1 on the posture and relaxation. Stretching before during breaks and after is necessary as well.