D
Nope despite me saying that it has happened more than once...she just said as this is your first time to see how it goes.....sigh I am not sleeping at night!!!Never had it but I read that it's common in pregnancy (for all women)
I did have an inflamed tendon in my wrist once though and found I really had to think about resting it. Rest did help a lot. Did the doctor suggest a splint or anything?
I've already googled haha but thank you! But I am not due to see my Midwife again until February!If it continues, you could try asking your midwife for advice maybe?
Here's some basic info:
http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/carpal-tunnel-syndrome/Pages/Whatisit.aspx
I hope you get some relief
I've already googled haha but thank you! But I am not due to see my Midwife again until February!
Next available appointment isn't until the end of next week....I guess it's something, i am trying to see if i can see my Midwife on Friday, as I have to pick up a prescription Friday! If not then I will just have to wait until next week to see my GP. Would a pillow help though???Maybe go back to your doctor then and say it's keeping you awake?
Mind you, pregnancy is a time of disturbed sleep anyway - in practice for the arrival of baby! Would something like resting it on a pillow by your side help? I had a fab pregnancy pillow that helped my hips and back, so sometimes a little extra comfort or a change of position can relieve the pain if not totally cure it.
I will try a pillow tonight....no harm in trying I guess! Thank youI don't know if a pillow would help, but I was thinking you could maybe rest your arm on it and it might help relieve some of the pain. If certain positions make the pain worse, then having a pillow 'in the right place' might help a little because you could train yourself to try to keep your arm there rather than above your head/under your side/whichever position makes it hurt more.
I know you can buy wrist splints in high street chemists but I'm not sure whether that would be a good idea, so I thought maybe the pillow would be a gentle alternative until you get seen.
I had mine surgercally decompressed 20+ years ago (caused by a sports injury) pre the surgery, wrist braces helped (the ones with a metal plate in) and keeping the affected wrist raised above heart level also can help as it reduces the swelling. Anti- inflammitories can help (asprin, ibuprofen) releive the pain. before my surgery my hand used to go so dead I'd bash it against the wall to recover some feeling (not a good idea I know, but it was so frustrating). my surgeon gave me a fab scar, and extended my "lifeline" off the edge of my hand!
Hello, I went to my GP today who said I most probably have carpal tunnel syndrome...yay!
I haven't really thought much about my arm/wrist/hand pain before until last night when I was on the pc and was leaning on my elbow for about 10 minutes and after leaning on it my fingers were really tingling and my pinky finger and the finger next to it were very numb for about 3 hours....and I had pain in my wrist.....like an achy pain in my wrist and arm all night and every now and again shooting pain in my hand on the side...so I didn't really get much sleep.... the numbness has gone today but the achy pain hasn't. Anyone else have carpal tunnel syndrome??
@nosher8355 The OP is pregnant. Most cases of carpal tunnel syndrome that develop in pregnancy resolve a few months after birth without treatment. Odds are Nicola won't need an op
Was just about to point out that I cannot take ibuprofen lol! I refrain from taking any pain relief in pregnancy unless it's REALLY necessary xxThat sounds unpleasant! The need to wall-bash I mean : D
I know you didn't intend for the OP to take any drugs, but just a reminder to any pregnant readers that things like ibuprofen are not recommended in pregnancy:
http://www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/2398.aspx?CategoryID=54
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