Wikipedia says that RSI is also called 'work related upper limb disorder', but I'm getting serious knee pain when I'm sat working for long periods (18+ hours).
Has anyone else experienced this, and have you found a solution?
|
|
Wikipedia says that RSI is also called 'work related upper limb disorder', but I'm getting serious knee pain when I'm sat working for long periods (18+ hours). Has anyone else experienced this, and have you found a solution?
|
||
|
|
|
|
It's not really RSI, but poor posture/ergonomics can absolutely place stress on your lower body. Especially the joints. |
||
|
|
|
|
See a doctor. Hearsay from other people - even with similar symptoms cannot replace proper medical diagnosis. |
||
|
|
|
|
You can't get RSI in your legs but it's perfectly possible to get DVT while sat at your computer for many hours. |
||
|
|
|
|
I suffer from rsi, and sometimes also pain in the knee. The only solution afaik: 1) lessen the load (even with perfect posture and ergonomics there is still load that can be to much, especially when you are already in pain and some damage is there). Do this by not sitting as long at a time, and try to not sit on the same chair when you're not working. Best is to alternate between sitting, laying down, and walking around in my experience. 2) work out a little, move, ride a bike for 20 min a day or so. 3) if the above doesn't help, go see a doctor, especially when it keeps getting worse. The way back to normal will take longer and longer if you wait to react (i know this from personal experience). |
||
|
|
|
|
18 hours of sitting way too much and is likely to cause many kinds of problems - not just knee pain. Split the time spent while sitting at least into shorter sessions. |
||
|
|
|
|
I highly recommend the Swopper chair for back and leg pain: http://www.workchairs.com/ |
||
|
|
|
|
My solution (I suffer from this as well) is to get up every hour or so and stroll for a couple of minutes.... |
||
|
|
|
|
I've upvoted David's answer and repeat it again for emphasis. See a doctor! This is too serious a problem to diagnose on Stack Overflow, helpful as it might be. |
||
|
|