Hi,
I wanted to give my 5 cents to this post for sometime now. I am not a physician and could not agree more with Ielle that you should consult to a specialist, however I have suffered from chronic inflammation in both of my wrists for over 14 months, I could not use my hands for basicaly anything, like brushing my teeth, needless to say playing the piano. I felt I should share my experience in case it is helpful to anyone.
The inflammation started as a simple sore wrist due to a minor injury and got worse to a painful swollen wrist in 2 days after using the computer mouse and keyboard. Eventually my left wrist got inflammed too, because of overuse, the right wrist was immobilized so I had to use the left one at work. To make the story short, after 12 - 13 months of no signs of recovery I realized that there was an underlying issue. For some time even before the injury, I had tingling and numbness in the pinky and ring fingers during my sleep in both hands, as the symptoms were mild I just learned to live with them. I learned that these are symptoms of nerve entrapment and can cause inflammation in the arm. Inflammation in the tendons causes muscle tighness which triggers more inflamation in the same and other tendons in the arm. So I already had an inflammation process at the time of the injury and could not recover the wrists because I was not treating the underlying cause (correlation and causation

). As soon as I started doing flossing exercises to release the entrapped nerve, I felt my wrists got better in a matter of weeks. I had to do other things too.
So identifying the cause of the injury is very important. But, what was the cause of the (ullnar) nerve entrapment?: Bad ergonomics and a bad sleepling position. Many decades of bad ergonomics sitting at the computer desk and at the piano had its toll in my arms. Posture while sitting is very important.
A recommendation I could give you to help the healing process is the following, but please consult with a specialist:
- hot compresses in the forearm muscles (not in the wrist). The heat applied to the muscle has a huge impact in relaxing the tight muscles which will stop the vicious loop inflammation -> tightness -> inflammation. It worked like a charm for me. Notice that this works when you are in the recovery phase, in the acute phase you rather need cold compresses in the wrist area, anti-inflammatory medication and to stop the swelling. But you really need the guide of a physician to know in which phase you are.
- Also in the recovery phase, wrist rehabilitation exercises , I did these ones:
- Tension and tightness are likely going to provoke injuries. I'd recommend to warm up fingers, wrists, elbows and shoulders before playing the piano. I do these exercises before playing:
I wish you a speedy recovery as I know how it feels.
KT