Get a vertical mouse. Now. I used to get wrist pain and tennis elbow (lateral epicondylitis) and it was the difference between working, or not. I highly recommend anything from Evoluent.
And use the pomodoro technique where you can (20 mins on, 5 mins off).
I had exactly the same issue about 2 years ago. Long hours of mouse use and I was suddenly getting pain in my wrist.
I did the following:
1. Use the trackball, but do it left handed.
It doesn't slow you down any more than it does learning to use it right handed, but it gives your right hand a break (and yes, it totally SUCKS for about 3 weeks, and then you're roughly as productive).
2. Take a serious look at your mouse.
If you have any of the "magic mice" that support gestures, ditch that shit as fast as possible. Holding your fingers arched like that for long periods does damage.
If you don't have that mouse, look for two things:
- Very light weight (yes, a super cheap lightweight mouse is better than a heavy "ergonomic" mouse in most cases).
- Able to rest your fingers. You need to be able to relax the tendons in your hand/wrist, and you can't do that if you're supporting your fingers in the air (part of why the magic mouse is literally the devil).
3. After a month or two of using the trackball, feel free to switch back to using a decent mouse like normal. In my case, eliminating a magic mouse and giving my hand/wrist a few months to heal did the trick.
4. If none of the above helps, contact a therapist.
I started to have pain in my finger tips, wrist and in my back, resulting from bad posture and devices with poor ergonomics (Apple mouse + laptop).
Realising that at age 30 this is a bad sign, I invested around 2000€ on a more ergonomic setup:
- a proper chair (I got a Vitra ID, but there are lots of good options out there)
- an electric height-adjustable desk
- an external display mounted on an Ergotron LX monitor mount
- a mechanical split ergonomic keyboard (Matias)
- an ergonomic mouse (Logitech MX Master)
My setup allows me to stand (which I occasionally do), but it‘s amazing how much difference it makes even when sitting. I can adjust desk / chair / monitor so my arms and neck are in a relaxed position. After a few weeks, the pain in my hand went away.
Getting the right equipment is really important. I have short legs, so standard desks are too high for me. A lot of cheap chairs are not adjustable enough (too high on their lowest setting).
Invest in ergonomics, and consider your entire setup. A trackpad instead of a mouse won‘t help if your wrist is at the wrong angle because of a desk that has the wrong height.
I had wrist/hand pains twice, especially during using mouse, and in both cases, it was my own fault.
The first time, I think, it was because of me over-using AC during the commute. It would blow on my hands, and it struck me as a possible fault one day. After I changed my behavior, the discomfort started to go away in a matter of days, disappearing completely in a week or so.
The second time, it was due to a standing desk at new day-job. I've noticed that I have a bad habit of leaning on my hands when standing at the desk and putting some stress on them. I limited the time I am standing, and I'm more careful about it now.
My point is: watch your body, watch what you're doing, and think what could be affecting you. There is plenty of possible causes, and it's most efficient if you get a good sense of what makes your body hurt. It might be something more medical too, but doesn't have to be.
I had really bad wrist pain from having a computer-related job for >10 years and spending my nights gaming on my PC (probably also from bad posture). One thing that helped me a lot was switching to my left hand for mousing. At first it was horrible, because I'm definitely not ambidextrous, but after several weeks I got good enough with it such that it didn't make much of a difference anymore. I would switch back to my right hand if something was urgent and I needed to be fast.
Now after a few years I can left-hand mouse as if it was my right hand and my right wrist feels fine. When my left wrist starts to feel a bit sore, I just switch back to the right hand for a few days/weeks. Variety of movements helps a lot.
If I was you I would also try to take frequent breaks and do exercise regularly, if you don't already. You will just feel better overall if you're in good shape.
Good luck!
I've had so many ergo problems. Here's some things I'd suggest:
1. Try different mice, as people suggested
2. Watch the height of your desk. Is your desk too high? Is your wrist kinked? I love my sit stand desk for this, sometimes just moving the surface up or down half an inch makes a huge difference. Keep it moving over time so you don't get locked in.
3. Wrist exercises, both stretching and grip strength. Get a pair of grippers from amazon (https://www.amazon.com/Captains-Crush-Hand-Gripper-Point/dp/...)
Working on strengthening your forearm might help as well.
Two things have worked for me.
(a) Switching hands.
(b) Trying to use the mouse and the keyboard without constantly forcing the hand into a horizontal position (right hand thumb pointing left). Instead I got into a habit of holding the mouse in a more (not completely) vertical position (thumb up) and pressing the mouse button with the side of my finger.
My solution (on a desktop) was to temporarily switch from a right handed mouse to using an ambidextrous trackball with my left hand, and a wrist rest for both my keyboard and trackball. I am _not_ ambidextrous. I also wore a custom made wrist rest-splint while working and sleeping. After a year or so, I returned to a right handed mouse and continue to use a gel filled wrist rest for both the keyboard and mouse. If using a full sized keyboard, get one without a numpad.
Get a rest-splint for your wrist. Your injuries will not heal without rest.
EDIT: remembered my wrist-splint was bespoke
Ive had severe wrist pain before, saw occupational therapists, was diagnosed with repetitive stress disorder, changed hands for the mice, tried trackballs, trackpads, ergonomic mice, the only thing that worked for me was getting a Wacom tablet. It turned out that it was clicking the mouse button that aggravated my wrist. Been pain free for years except when I play too much with my phone. It takes about a week to get used to the tablet but I actually prefer it to the mouse now, even when not taking into account the wrist pain. Good luck.
1. Take a break for a week or two. I used the time to learn stuff and write down everything by hand. Every gadget you acquire is for after you have recovered. Don't exercise either ... you'll only worsen the inflammation.
2. Google "wrist pain stretches". Do them religiously, regularly (every time you have a break) and carefully.
3. Alternate ice and hot towels a few times a day. This really improves recovery time.
4. Work on your posture. Check Esther Gokhale's TED talk.
Been there. One set of (otherwise paired) muscles gets inflamed.
The two things that helped me were: (a) Microsoft Trackball Explorer which is a lovely ergonomically shaped mouse - providing you are right-handed. (b) Tennis ball (or similar) to squeeze which helps build up both sets of muscles and thereby helping "rebalance" your wrist muscles.
Vertical or tilted mice help a lot, and keeping your arm nearly level so you're not bending your wrist a lot. Also, personally I prefer a wider grip mouse for gaming, because I have a tendency to death grip smaller mice, but that's probably only relevant if you game
Never having experienced any discomfort myself, but maybe you could try to buy an ergonomic mouse, which are basically "vertical" move. It is apparently better because you don't have to "twist" your hand. And it is probably closer to a real mouse.
Testing mobile apps in the emulator caused my pain. I mapped the mouse-button to keyboard key for my left hand.
For browsing I use browser plugins that help navigating wtih the keyboard (saka keys e.g.)
Lots of good advice here. I'll try in an additional left field one - get a good backpack. Use both straps. Don't carry too much weight.
Has anyone who has been regularly lifting and exercising experienced wrist pain due to computer overuse?
Try a wacom pen. Different grip.
I've experienced various types of computing ergonomic pains since I started using computers. I bought my first computer with a mouse in 1988. Within the first couple of years, I bought my first trackball.[1] It was my main mouse, for a couple of years, but I was spending a lot of time with regular mice at school and then work. A decade later, I got my second trackball [2]. In between I had settled on a particular Logitech mouse that ceased manufacture. My reason for describing my trackballs[3] is context for my random internet advice:
Large scale ergonomic are more likely to be the long term problem than the small scale ergonomics of mouse versus trackball.
My second trackball relieved mouse pain for a while, but long sessions at the computer still could produce pain in my mouse hand...or trackball hand as the case may be. Big long lasting improvement came from purchasing a new desk [4] with a well rounded corners where the top plane of the work surface meets the side edges. The large radius (say 1cm or more) eliminates the pressure point where my forearm starts to rest on the desktop.
The folding table pretty much solved my problems with mouse hand pain...when I could use it, but most of the workplaces I've worked in had bring your own desk policies...and one actively upgraded all of us to glass desktops while I worked there because glass desks looked stylish.[5]
So these days, I don't have mouse hand pain because I don't use a mouse (in anger for long periods). I use a laptop with a trackpoint and trackpad. I use as many keyboard shortcuts as I can remember. I try to learn the command line. If I had a touchscreen on my laptop, I'd use that too.
Which of course means I use a laptop to eliminate mouse hand pain. I also use it to eliminate keyboard related pain by sitting the laptop in my lap. Because it sits in my lap, I eliminate the pains associated with finding the perfect office chair and desk combination...and lighting, don't forget the effects of dealing with bad lighting on posture and display positioning. I primarily use a lounge chair [6] instead of a desk.
Finally, I still experience pain from bad ergonomics from time to time. When I do:
+ I identify the coarser grained ergonomic issues.
+ I stretch my hands. Arm extended palm down. With the other hand, bend all the fingers together up and back to and past a right angle. Googling "carpal tunnel stretch" was how I found that.
Good luck.
[1]: Like this with a cheap tiny extra push button added for the second mouse button. http://www.richardlagendijk.nl/foto/cip/joystick_wico_trackb...
[2]: Yes, that's a PS/2 Mouseport. It probably shipped with a DB9 serial port adapter as well. https://d2ydh70d4b5xgv.cloudfront.net/images/e/a/logitech-tr...
[3]: Besides get off my lawn nostalgia and a strange kind of joy that suddenly recollecting the old Amiga trackball brought me seven minutes into the in-head composition of this comment.
[4]: Well actually a folding table with a molded top. Probably similar to this, but I would inspect the corner in person: http://www.globalindustrial.com/p/office/tables/folding/port...
[5]: That's what you get working for a corporate VP of design in an organization where design is pretty pictures.
[6]: Ikea Poang with Ottoman
I haven't had problems with my wrist, however I have had with my shoulders as I am fairly large my arms are even further out than many causing the bend back of the wrist onto a traditional keyboard to be problematic. It's the same problem as causing wrist issues for many but I found the impact on my shoulders greater in my case.
Though excited by a number of custom ergonomic keyboard designs (a la ergodox etc), I started using the Microsoft Ergonomic keyboards about 2y ago, specifically the Sculpt Ergonomic and later the Surface Ergonomic. That has helped my comfort in that area a lot - and had a relatively low entry price ($100-200 AUD) versus some of the crazier keyboards. I would highly recommend them. The sculpt ergonomic (older version) also had a front rest to raise it to a kind of back angle. The newer Surface Ergonomic does not have that which I miss, but it does have proper arrow keys, home/end/pgup/pgdown and function keys. It also has a number pad which I dislike as it puts my trackpad further to the right, the original Sculpt did not. Either way both of them were a huge improvement and I would recommend either.
Secondarily laptops are DREADFUL for posture, because the screen is very low and the keyboard often quite deep into the desk. I've found this causes both slouching of myself to get to the keyboard and then my neck to look at the monitor. So I gave up using a laptop and now use a desktop - though a keyboard & mouse for your laptop is also a perfectly good solution! I have my monitors raised up off the desk about 10-15cm more than the default stands would allow (even a Dell fancy pants one) and find that is the best comfort for me. There are also various guides online for how to best setup your keyboard & monitor position, relatively also to your chair position. Arm angles etc. I'd suggest finding an authoritative guide and following that.
I also use a trackpad - but not because of wrist issues - I have no idea if that would help or hinder wrist issues (Google might know?). But from using a Mac Laptop with a very good trackpad for many years, I much prefer them to mice (actually I really dislike Mice) and so now I use a Logitech T650 trackpad on my desktop.
I would really like to move to a standing desk but I am a bit prohibited on cost for that one right now. I need to save a little as I think its a worthwild investment - but I think I want a desk that raises and lowers the entire thing as opposed to the vari-desk style systems - partly related to the fact I have 3x24-27" monitors. But it also needs to be fast & quiet.. mmm.... next project.
Lastly I would feel remiss not to refer you to your GP or some other kind of specialist in this area. There are serious problems that can occur and require treatment (a la Carpal Tunnel). You can read all the opinions you like but I was never having real pain of any kind personally, just a bit of discomfort. I decided to tweak my setup for the better. If you're already into the area of pain, having someone look at it and potentially do some scans etc seems like a highly valuable investment into both y our working future and your personal comfort - I am fairly sure these issues can escalate if untreated. Your hands are valuable.. don't mess around and at least investig ate it with professional help!
I purchased a device called the Ultimate Zapper which has completely eliminated any joint pain I've had throughout my entire body, including extreme wrist joint pain & lower back pain related to my career as a full stack web developer. It cured the pain within 48 hours of using the device, and it has so far had permanent effects.
Before you go on spending on Ergonomic what not setup. Try therapy. Google it first - kind of pain (sharp or constant ) you have , exactly where you have ( thumb side or ulnar side), what movements are restricted by affliction, is it nerves or muscle etc...spend sometime finding what you have. Consult doctor if you have to. Start therapy ...most of the time it's stretching/compressing exercise once or twice a day. You can easily see the improvements once you do therapy.
I recently suffered from ulnar entrapment syndrome ...googled it, watched videos, did suggested stretching for 2 weeks i guess. All healed.