writer's cramp
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A specific type of task-related focal dystonia, a neurological movement disorder, characterized by involuntary, painful muscular spasms or cramps in the muscles of the hand and forearm during the act of handwriting.
Usage
This term is used specifically in medical and general contexts to describe a condition affecting the ability to write by hand. - It is typically used as a non-count noun (e.g., suffering from writer's cramp). - The condition is often associated with prolonged or repetitive writing tasks.
Examples
- After hours of taking notes, she began to experience a painful writer's cramp.
- The doctor diagnosed his condition as writer's cramp and recommended occupational therapy.
- Writer's cramp can make simple tasks like signing a check very difficult.
Advanced Usage
- The term can be used metaphorically to describe a temporary creative block or difficulty in writing, though this is an informal extension of its primary medical meaning.
- After three rejected drafts, he felt a kind of mental writer's cramp.
Variants and Related Words
- Scribner's palsy: An older, less common synonym for writer's cramp.
- Focal hand dystonia: The broader medical category under which writer's cramp is classified.
- Musician's cramp / Dystonia: A related condition affecting instrumentalists, analogous to writer's cramp.
Synonyms
- Graphospasm: A technical medical synonym.
- Hand dystonia: A more general term.
Notes on Meaning
- Writer's cramp refers specifically to the symptom (the cramp) and the syndrome (the condition) caused by the neurological disorder. It is not a simple muscle fatigue from overuse, though overuse can trigger it.
- The apostrophe in "writer's" indicates possession, meaning "the cramp of a writer" or "cramp associated with writing."
Noun
- muscular spasms of thumb and forefinger while writing with a pen or pencil