Hand Atrophy

Causes of Left Arm Numbness

According to MedlinePlus, a publication of the National Institutes of Health, arm numbness, including left arm numbness, is often accompanied by a tingling sensation. Nerve injuries, spinal conditions, blood vessel disorders, electrolyte...

Exercises for Hands After Wrist Breakage

Rehabilitating your hand after you've broken your wrist should be aimed at increasing both strength and range of motion. While your wrist is healing from a breakage, it is immobilized, as is the forearm and hand. Lack of use can cause atrophy and...

What Are the Symptoms of Neuropathy?

Neuropathy refers to disease of the peripheral nerves that travel from the central nervous system to reach the muscles and organs. Neuropathy has many causes, including common diseases such as diabetes, hereditary diseases, infections and toxins....

Ulnar Neuropathy Exercises for Hand Relief

If you've ever whacked your elbow unexpectedly, you may have experienced a numbness, pain and tingling along the side of your hand and into the pinky and ring fingers. You may have even said you hit your "funny bone." In reality, the blow was to...

Why Do the Disabled Need Hand Exercise Balls?

The truth is that not all disabled people need hand exercise balls. A man with paralyzed legs who runs wheelchair marathons and paints doesn't need extra development for his hands. Neither does an autistic woman with perfect motor control. Other...

Hereditary Neuropathy Symptoms

There are several types of hereditary neuropathies, which can affect the motor, sensory or autonomic nerves, or a combination of different nerve types. Symptoms depend on the type of nerve affected. The severity of symptoms vary greatly between...

Description of Muscular Endurance

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are five major components of physical fitness: cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, body composition and flexibility. Each of these components factor...

Paralyzed Hand Exercises

When afflicted with a paralyzed part of the body, a patient will typically be prescribed a physical therapy treatment plan to rehabilitate strength in the muscles of the limb. If you are receiving treatment for a paralyzed hand, for example,...

Post-Operative Hand Exercises

Following a hand operation, you are likely to experience some level of pain or discomfort in your hand, fingers and wrist. In addition, the swelling and muscle atrophy experienced following a surgical procedure will cause you to lose some range...

What Are the Causes of Right Shoulder Pain?

There are numerous causes of right shoulder pain. According to the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health or NIH, swelling, inflammation or tearing of the tissue surrounding the shoulder joint can cause shoulder...

Tamarind for Diabetes

Diabetes is on the rise worldwide, with about 25 percent of the world's population suffering from the disease, according to a 2010 article in "Pakistan Journal of Pharmacological Science." In America, some 20 million people are diabetic and...

How to Care for a Broken Wrist at Home

A broken wrist often results from an accidental fall, as your natural instinct is to try to use an arm to brace yourself against the impact. This type of injury requires treatment from a trained medical professional who knows how to properly set...

Broken Wrist From Tennis

Breaking your wrist playing tennis might happen when breaking a fall or possibly through repetitive stress on the wrist when hitting the ball incorrectly. Your tennis game will have to wait until the bone is healed. It takes approximately six...

Diabetic-Related Finger Diseases

A diabetic has an increased risk of problems in the extremities, especially the hands and feet. Although the cause of these problems is not always clear, many extremity conditions -- including diseases of the fingers -- are caused by insufficient...

5 Things You Need to Know About Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

The carpal tunnel of the wrist houses the median nerve, which runs from the forearm into the hand, as well as nine tendons that bend the fingers and thumb. The floor and walls of the carpal tunnel are formed by the bones of the wrist. The roof...

Exercise Guide for the Wrist & Hand

For the physical therapy patient who has been diagnosed with repetitive stress injury or RSI, a course of physical therapy centered on the wrists and hands is important. The therapist devises a treatment plan that targets the patient's symptoms so...

ALS Onset Signs and Symptoms

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease after the baseball legend who had it, attacks nerve cells in the brain that control voluntary muscles, according to the National Institute of Neurological...

Diseases that Cause Muscular Degeneration

Muscles make up half the body's weight. They are necessary for movement, opening and closing the eyes, chewing, facial expressions, protection of organs and contraction of organs like the heart. Diseases of the muscles may be inherited, may be...

Exercises to Help Tight Muscles & Cracking in the Hands

The hand is an active appendage compromised of bone, muscles and ligaments. Hands perform a variety of motor functions, but they are susceptible to arthritis, tendinitis and fractures. Any of the aforementioned conditions can cause muscle...

The Long-Term Effects of Protein-Energy Malnutrition

Numerous long-term effects are associated with protein-energy malnutrition, or protein-energy undernutrition. According to the Merck Manuals website, protein-energy malnutrition is an energy deficit caused by the chronic deficiency of all...

About CRPS

Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic condition that most often takes place in the arms, feet, legs and hands. This develops as a result of an injury or illness that starts in another area of the body. It can also be caused from the...

Muscle Growth Facts

Muscle growth and motor development occur in a predictable sequence in babies. They first develop the large muscles, which allow them to sit upright and move their arms and legs. Small muscle development follows and involves the use of the fingers...

Symptoms Associated With Stenosis Within the C Spine

Cervical stenosis occurs when either the cervical spinal canal becomes narrowed, termed "central stenosis", or when lateral nerve foremen become narrow, termed "lateral stenosis". Both cause neck pain, although the spinal cord is injured with...

Vitamin Deficiencies & Crohn's Disease

Crohn's disease is an inflammatory bowel disease. It can affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract, but mostly affects the lower part of the tract. People suffering from this disease may experience diarrhea, rectal bleeding and arthritis....

Muscular Diseases in Babies

Muscular diseases in babies are generally progressive. Babies may appear normal at birth but then are unable to meet expected milestones or regress in development. Muscular diseases can affect muscles that are vital for sustaining life.

Five-minute Chair Exercises

The longer you sit, the more your body begs to move and stretch. Your muscles atrophy and get softer and softer. Maintain tone, circulation and flexibility even in a chair. In just five minutes, you can gently engage your legs, calves, abdomen,...

Shoulder Exercise Programs for a Frozen Shoulder

Frozen shoulder is a condition resulting in shoulder joint inflammation, stiffness and pain. The condition typically develops in individuals who have experienced long-term shoulder immobilization. With treatment, a frozen shoulder can usually...