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Relax, don’t worry about comp-related disorders
Friday, July 11 2003 19:52 Hrs (IST)
Washington: Computers are here to stay, and so are computer related injuries and other disorders
experienced regularly by computer users. However, these can be avoided by taking a few simple
precautions, advice researchers.
By measuring muscle actions and breathing, Erik Peper, director of the Institute for Holistic Healing
Studies at San Francisco State University, and colleagues have found that people can learn to
recognize early symptoms that can lead to injury and then take steps to maintain their health.
The studies on assessing, treating and preventing these computer- related injuries appear in the
current issue of the journal Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback. Peper and colleagues used a
technique called surface electromyography to measure the action of muscles in the upper back, the
right shoulder and right forearm in right-handed people using a computer mouse. Another device
measured breathing rates.
The advantage of surface electromyography is that it can point out to both observers and participants
which muscles were tense before they were aware of the tension and long before injury occurs.
The researchers tested 18 volunteers as they typed on a keyboard and used a mouse. As they
performed these operations, the subjects breathed faster and experienced tension in all the muscle
groups, including the upper back opposite the mouse hand. Muscle tension combined with minimal
movement may cause problems by limiting the flow of blood and thus slowing muscle regeneration.
Rapid and shallow breathing also increases neck and shoulder tension and raises the risk of
hyperventilation.
"Most participants were surprised that they had increased breathing rates and heightened muscle
activity during the type- and-point test," Peper says. "People are so totally wrapped up in their work that
they are unaware of tension patterns until they experience discomfort." Even with proper ergonomic
settings for the keyboard and mouse, Peper says, people often unknowingly engage unnecessary
muscles, which can lead to repetitive stress injury.
Peper and colleagues offered another group of volunteers training in muscle relaxation and breathing,
using surface electromyography to make the subjects aware of what their bodies were doing.
After three training sessions and practicing the skills at home, they were tested again. The volunteers
reported significantly decreased symptoms, compared to a control group. They felt better and had
learned to relax their neck and shoulders, breathed from their diaphragm rather than their chest,
took both short and longer breaks, and made changes in their working patterns to reduce the risk of
repetitive stress injury.
ANI
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