06-17-2014 16:38
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06-17-2014 16:38
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Hey everyone! About 10 days ago, I sprained my wrist while doing some forearm curls at the gym. I have been working my arms 2-3 times a week for months, but did recently increase the weight and moved my wrist wrong during the curl. The pain isn't noticeable unless I am actively using the wrist in certain motions.
The question I have is, how can I get back into some kind of arm routine for Biceps/Triceps/Shoulders while minimizing the impact on said wrist? I do already use gloves that include a wrist support band.
Or, do I just need to deal with it and take a few weeks off?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts/feedback!
God bless.
Answered! Go to the Best Answer.

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06-18-2014 00:28
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06-18-2014 00:28
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Now, are you doing isolation exercise for those muscles, which almost certainly use the forearms and wrists at end of lever?
Or are you doing good compound moves working bigger muscles that also happen to work those minor muscles too?
Because those usually don't sprain like that.
Every single pull with upper body is bicep workout, every single push is tricep workout.
And you are working out a bigger muscle at the same time.
If this is purely for vanity then understood, but you'll still hit them doing the bigger muscles.
Bench press, incline bench press, shoulder press - triceps.
Bent-over row, pull ups/lat pulldown, upright row - biceps.
You do a well laid out routine with all 6 of those - your biceps and triceps will feel like they got a workout - because they did.
And since those don't put the wrist at the end of a lever, the forearms and tendons stabilizing the wrist are not put under a huge strain.
Merely enough strength to keep it from tilting from neutral on the push stuff, confirm in neutral of course.
And the pull stuff is just grip, so while still forearm and those tendons, not the same as forearm curls.
You may be able to continue lifting. But ice after workout, warmup well prior.
Help the next searcher of answers, mark a reply as Solved if it was, or a thumbs up if it was a good idea too.

06-17-2014 17:16 - edited 06-17-2014 17:16
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06-17-2014 17:16 - edited 06-17-2014 17:16
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You need to take time off until it heals or you will just make it worse.
Have you been to the DR? They might send you to a PT who will help you heal faster
Wendy | CA | Moto G6 Android
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06-17-2014 17:31
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06-17-2014 17:31
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Thanks for the feedback!

06-18-2014 00:28
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06-18-2014 00:28
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Now, are you doing isolation exercise for those muscles, which almost certainly use the forearms and wrists at end of lever?
Or are you doing good compound moves working bigger muscles that also happen to work those minor muscles too?
Because those usually don't sprain like that.
Every single pull with upper body is bicep workout, every single push is tricep workout.
And you are working out a bigger muscle at the same time.
If this is purely for vanity then understood, but you'll still hit them doing the bigger muscles.
Bench press, incline bench press, shoulder press - triceps.
Bent-over row, pull ups/lat pulldown, upright row - biceps.
You do a well laid out routine with all 6 of those - your biceps and triceps will feel like they got a workout - because they did.
And since those don't put the wrist at the end of a lever, the forearms and tendons stabilizing the wrist are not put under a huge strain.
Merely enough strength to keep it from tilting from neutral on the push stuff, confirm in neutral of course.
And the pull stuff is just grip, so while still forearm and those tendons, not the same as forearm curls.
You may be able to continue lifting. But ice after workout, warmup well prior.
Help the next searcher of answers, mark a reply as Solved if it was, or a thumbs up if it was a good idea too.

06-18-2014 03:31
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06-18-2014 03:31
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My routine is typically bench press/bicep curls/forearm curls with free weights. Then I use the cable machine to do triceps, and cap it off with some machines (row, pulldown, fly's).
Like you suggested, I'll try sticking to just the compound exercises until I'm back up and running. Thanks for the tips!

06-19-2014 09:55
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06-19-2014 09:55
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Realistically, it's the advice that every active person dreads to hear but you do need to take time off. Like the guys have already mentioned, you run the risk of causing more damage and it isn't worth it. You should probably consider a trip to the doc. A guy I work with injured his wrist a few months ago and it still hasn't healed. He decided to go to the doctors a few weeks ago and there are more complicated issues which they are now fixing for him. Hopefully you don't have any of those issues but it's better to be safe than sorry and it gets your back in the gym quicker with the correct medical advice. All the best for a speedy recovery!

06-19-2014 10:14
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06-19-2014 10:14
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Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
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