Volume 46, Issue 5 pp. 521-533
Article

Elbow and wrist/hand symptoms among 6,943 computer operators: A 1-year follow-up study (the NUDATA study)

Christina Funch Lassen MD

Corresponding Author

Christina Funch Lassen MD

Department of Occupational Medicine, The Copenhagen County Hospital in Glostrup, Glostrup, Denmark

Arbejdsmedicinsk klinik, Nordre Ringvej, DK 2600 Glostrup, Denmark.Search for more papers by this author
Sigurd Mikkelsen MD, D MSc

Sigurd Mikkelsen MD, D MSc

Department of Occupational Medicine, The Copenhagen County Hospital in Glostrup, Glostrup, Denmark

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Ann Isabel Kryger MD, PhD

Ann Isabel Kryger MD, PhD

Department of Occupational Medicine, The Copenhagen County Hospital in Glostrup, Glostrup, Denmark

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Lars P.A. Brandt MD, PhD

Lars P.A. Brandt MD, PhD

Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, The University Hospital of Odense, Odense C, Denmark

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Erik Overgaard MD

Erik Overgaard MD

Department of Occupational Medicine, Herning Hospital, Herning, Denmark

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Jane Frølund Thomsen MD, PhD

Jane Frølund Thomsen MD, PhD

Department of Occupational Medicine, The Copenhagen County Hospital in Glostrup, Glostrup, Denmark

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Imogen Vilstrup MSc

Imogen Vilstrup MSc

Department of Occupational Medicine, Herning Hospital, Herning, Denmark

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Johan Hviid Andersen MD, PhD

Johan Hviid Andersen MD, PhD

Department of Occupational Medicine, Herning Hospital, Herning, Denmark

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First published: 15 October 2004
Citations: 92

Abstract

Background

The aim of this study was to examine relations between computer work aspects and elbow and wrist/hand pain conditions and disorders.

Methods

In a 1-year follow-up study among 6,943 technical assistants and machine technicians self-reported active mouse and keyboard time, ergonomic exposures and associations with elbow and wrist/hand pain were determined. Standardized clinical examinations were performed among symptomatic participants at baseline and at follow-up.

Results

For continuous duration of mouse time adjusted linear effects were statistically significant for all investigated pain conditions. For continuous duration of keyboard time the corresponding effects were statistically significant for wrist/hand pain conditions except incident ‘severe’ wrist/hand pain. There were no threshold effects above 0 hr per week (hr/w) of mouse exposure in association with pain conditions, while keyboard exposure showed a threshold effect with 12-month wrist/hand pain at follow-up. Clinical diagnoses were not associated with exposure.

Conclusions

Detailed examination of self-reported exposures showed that mouse and keyboard time predicted elbow and wrist/hand pain from low exposure levels without a threshold effect, but mouse and keyboard time were not predictors of clinical conditions. Am. J. Ind. Med. 46:521–533, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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