
Originally Posted by
beccaB
Oakleaf-did you have to stop biking? I hope you will tell me no....
At the time I wasn't bicycling, but because they kept prescribing rest, rest, rest, I had to stop motorcycling, and yeah, that was awful.
BUT. The pain wasn't so bad that it would've interfered with my ability to brake, steer or pull the throttle, and in retrospect I don't think rest accelerated the healing at all. Even though I told every health care practitioner I saw how the injury occurred, I think the treatment they prescribed was more appropriate to a strain or sprain and not a simple bruise, and I don't think they ever really isolated how much of my pain was from the nerve and how much was from the tendon.
JME, with a really freakish sort of injury (picked up a stepladder the same way I'd always done, and the edge of the step put the full weight of the ladder right onto that soft tissue). Even touching a ladder totally freaks me out, now, never mind I have a phobia of falling!
I have a strong suspicion that some of the PTs didn't believe that resting was a good idea, but were deferring to the orthos. And in turn, because it wasn't a surgical injury, the hand surgeons basically didn't even want to know me. I've had that experience before - if it's not surgical, the orthos just say "no activity outside of PT," when that turns out to be really damaging, and the best thing is to keep the muscles strong and the joints loose by normal activity. Hopefully I've learned my lesson about that if I get another injury. 
Still, I think the possibility that time alone will heal - and rest may not - is something to be discussed frankly with practitioners. Especially with something like a hand, which not only is a MAJOR interference with ADLs, but wound up causing tendinitis in elbows and wrist because of shifting all the work of that hand to other joints, doing things backwards and upside down, etc. Probably didn't help my TMJ either, because of all the stuff I had to hold with my teeth. 
I recommend everyone going without one hand for three hours, just once, just to see what it's like.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 07-07-2010 at 03:07 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler