3 Hand Exercises You Should Try If You’ve Got Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Repetition on a keyboard can bring serious pain to your fingers and wrists. These simple at-your-desk yoga exercises help ease carpal tunnel syndrome...

June 26, 2013

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Because getting ahead at work is tough on the digits…

That nonstop pounding on the keyboard all day may help you get ahead, career-wise (assuming what you’re typing so frenetically is still intelligible) but it’s tough on the digits. Those tiny keystroke movements don’t seem like much, but all the repetition can bring the pain to your fingers and wrists. And once you do the damage, carpal tunnel syndrome chronic wrist, hand, and forearm pain can be a bear to get rid of.

READ MORE: The 4 Tightest Muscles – And Exactly How To Stretch Them

To ward off and relieve these symptoms, carve out two or three mini-breaks in your type-intensive day for these exercises from Karin Wiedemann of Urban Yoga.

Figure Eights

Sit up tall in a chair and bring your hands together in front of you, fingers interlaced. Keeping your elbows bent, alternately push your hands to the side so that your right wrist bends back, and then the left one. Using this back-and-forth as a base, start moving your hands in an imaginary figure eight, rotating the wrists more fully. Do this until you feel relief.

Overhead Reach

Still sitting upright, relax your arms at your sides so your palms face out comfortably. Take an inhale and lift your arms up overhead. Interlace your fingers. Turn your palms up to the ceiling, either keeping your arms slightly bent or straightening them. Hold for 10 slow, deep breaths (counting an inhale and an exhale as one breath).

On your last exhalation, lower your arms to your sides. Then inhale, interlacing your fingers overhead again, but this time with the opposite hand on top. Be sure to lift the thumb side of your hands as much as the pinky side. Hold for 10 slow, deep breaths. This overhead reach stretches out the muscles and connective tissue in the forearms and hands while bringing flexibility to the hands and fingers. Plus, it boosts circulation.

Finger-Bender

Sitting up, bring your right forearm in toward your chest. With your left hand, bend back your right fingers (minus thumb) to your right. Hold for 10 slow, deep breaths. Then bend those same four fingers the opposite way, with your palm pushing them toward the floor. Hold for 10 slow breaths before repeating with the left hand.

These 4 ridiculously simple stretches do insane things for your body. Plus: Use these 5 resistance band moves to ease knee pain