Chasing Kanji - 感情を追って

An American's travel traumas
アメリカ人の旅行の外傷

Oh, is that all?  

I had my follow up appointment with the specialist after having had the NCS on my wrist. My appointment was at 3:30pm. I arrived at about 3:20pm. They didn't call me until 4:05pm, so I spent a good amount of time with a book in the waiting room ignoring the chatter of small children (2) who were there with their parents. Luckily, I remembered to bring the book; otherwise, I might have been bored for my 45 minute wait.

The nurse took me back and took my blood pressure. He asked if I had low blood pressure. I told him it was usually the low side of normal. I said that's I'd just spent a relaxing 45 minutes reading a book and that could explain the low blood pressure. He seemed to think that was funny.

Talking with the doctor, it seems I have nueropraxia. There was latency in the amount of time it took the electric signal to reach the nodes in my finger tips, and this is what confirms the diagnosis. Basically, the nerve has been smushed. It can be done through athletics, which I did a lot of growing up. Also, the icing on the cake would be when I fell directly onto the outer part of my wrist. I did this while running and on concrete. Definitely enough to smush my nerve.

I had gotten a wrist brace to wear to as not to agitate the situation, thinking it might be carpal tunnel (see previous post). However, per the doctor's orders, I'm not to wear it at all, and I should do my activities as normal. Instead, I am supposed to massage the site with vitamin E (I bought d-alpha vitamin E softgels), and use a stress ball to strengthen the muscles around the nerve. Doing so will help the nerve regrow/heal as much as it can.

So, there you have it. The case of the tingling hand solved.

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