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I began fencing a few months ago, and although at first my hands were fine afterward, recently the right side of my ring finger on the hand I hold the foil with had been going numb after several bouts. At first the sensation -or lack thereof- would only last for a day or so and I figured it was simply because of the new activity, but after the most recent practice the finger continued to feel strange for over a week. Have any other fencers experienced this, and does anyone know how to prevent it?

2006-12-05 17:39:28 · 5 answers · asked by kiwi feathers 2 in Health General Health Care Injuries

5 answers

I've fenced for years and never experenced that. Is your weapon's grip comfortable? Are you squeezing too hard?

You should be holding the weapon basically with your thumb and forefinger--the other fingers are barely touching and simply guide the weapon--you don't grip it like a pistol. Maybe getting your coach to put your hand in the proper position would help, or switching to a different grip for your weapon.

2006-12-08 03:09:14 · answer #1 · answered by wayfaroutthere 7 · 0 0

I'm a 3rd 12 months scientific scholar and a rapid scan we could do to support check whether or not or now not that is carpal tunnel is an exam known as phalen's signal. Basically, you must preserve every hand in whole dorsiflexion (so, flex every wrist, and placed the again of every hand towards the again of the opposite and preserve it there for 30-60 seconds). This maneuver has the outcome of growing strain inside the carpal tunnel and compressing the median nerve. A constructive phalen's is tingling, burning, or numbness within the thumb, index or core finger and is suggestive of median nerve compression and carpal tunnel syndrome. Other assessments incorporate opposite phalen's, and Tinel's signal. If Phalen's produces tingling I could inspire you to appear up opposite Phalen's or Tinel's signal for extra checking out.

2016-09-03 11:44:09 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have never heard of something like this happening to any fencers i know. if you are holding your weapon with your ring finger (the one next to your pinkie) then you are probably holding your weopon wrong. Do you fence foil, epee, or saber? and do you have a pistol, or french grip? this could be happening because you are holding your weapon wrong so i would talk to your coach about it and they might know how to help. if you have any more questions you can email me.

2006-12-07 15:37:01 · answer #3 · answered by cheasy123 3 · 0 0

Sounds like you are either getting carpal tunnel syndrome, or a pinched nerve

2006-12-05 17:51:24 · answer #4 · answered by cprucka 4 · 0 0

you are probably cutting the circulation off somehow while fencing. ask your fencing teacher about it

2006-12-05 17:43:25 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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