Pins and needles in hands.

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sarahale

Über Member
Today I experienced the above, I've never had it happen before and just wanted to know if any of you have had the same.

I went for a 35 mile ride on my road bike, around mile 15 it poured with rain and I got completely soaked. I kept cycling and as the rain stopped most my clothes dried and I felt quite a comfortable temperature again. As soon as the rain stopped I put on some gloves just to keep myself a bit warmer. The only part of me that felt cold the whole way home was my feet. Suddenly 5 miles from home I got intense numbness and pins and needles in both my hands, so bad I had to pull over and stop. Has anyone had this before? I'm assuming it was just because I was cold even though I didn't feel it.

It was a shock as I've been so cold on rides before I've been shivering and had forearms lock up but never this. I've been riding the bike for a couple of years and never experienced anything like this. Would like to prevent it happening again, thanks.
 

2IT

Everything and everyone suffers in comparisons.
Location
Georgia, USA
Today I experienced the above, I've never had it happen before and just wanted to know if any of you have had the same.

I went for a 35 mile ride on my road bike, around mile 15 it poured with rain and I got completely soaked. I kept cycling and as the rain stopped most my clothes dried and I felt quite a comfortable temperature again. As soon as the rain stopped I put on some gloves just to keep myself a bit warmer. The only part of me that felt cold the whole way home was my feet. Suddenly 5 miles from home I got intense numbness and pins and needles in both my hands, so bad I had to pull over and stop. Has anyone had this before? I'm assuming it was just because I was cold even though I didn't feel it.

It was a shock as I've been so cold on rides before I've been shivering and had forearms lock up but never this. I've been riding the bike for a couple of years and never experienced anything like this. Would like to prevent it happening again, thanks.

Googled hypothermia pins and needles. It's a symptom of hypothermia. It doesn't have to be freezing for it to happen. Glad you are ok.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Presumably your gloves have padded palms and your bars are broad with padded tape? If not, you could re-wrap them with Specialized Body Geometry tape, which comes with gel pads that go underneath. Specialized bikes also come with a useful plastic angle thingy that uses the under-tape cables to broaden the flat top of the bars:

38005_00_d.jpg
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Even 85 might be too hard, what tyres are they and have you experimented with lower pressures? A nice quality tyre with a high TPI count will ride smoother than a hard, wire bead commuter tyre.
 
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sarahale

sarahale

Über Member
Caused by the warm blood getting back into your hands, the only cure is prevention. It is painful though :hugs:

It's odd because I commute through winter so have had cold hands many times, nothing like that though! But I suppose I am more appropriately dressed for the cold then
 
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sarahale

sarahale

Über Member
Presumably your gloves have padded palms and your bars are broad with padded tape? If not, you could re-wrap them with Specialized Body Geometry tape, which comes with gel pads that go underneath. Specialized bikes also come with a useful plastic angle thingy that uses the under-tape cables to broaden the flat top of the bars:

38005_00_d.jpg


I don't wear padded gloves for rides of less than 60ish miles but never have. My bars have a really nice foam bar tape on which I find very comfortable.
 
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sarahale

sarahale

Über Member
Googled hypothermia pins and needles. It's a symptom of hypothermia. It doesn't have to be freezing for it to happen. Glad you are ok.

I did think it would be to do with the cold, however not feeling cold apart from my toes it came as a huge shock. I will have to be more careful to dress for the weather and will get some padded gloves for everyday use too
 
I've had this a few times but winter mountaineering not cycling. Perhaps vibration plays a part but I suspect you just got much colder than you thought and it's damn painful when the blood returns.
 

Bazzer

Setting the controls for the heart of the sun.
Had you been gripping the bar tighter than you might otherwise have been in order to maintain warmth? Or kept your hands on the same place on the bar. I sometimes get numb hands if I move them to the curve on the upper part of the drop and forget about them being there.
 
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sarahale

sarahale

Über Member
Had you been gripping the bar tighter than you might otherwise have been in order to maintain warmth? Or kept your hands on the same place on the bar. I sometimes get numb hands if I move them to the curve on the upper part of the drop and forget about them being there.


I wasn't aware that I gripping tighter or awkwardly but something to watch out for if it happens again.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
I'd have thought that a lightweight tyre would suit a lightweight rider better. I've never used that Schwalbe Durano tyre but it looks quite stiff and heavy to me; I prefer to use a light, cotton sidewall tyre and run the slightly increased risk of punctures because the trade-off in comfort is worthwhile as I grow older and less flexible. My son, my cycling buddy and I all use Veloflex Open Corsas, which are reckoned to be one of the smoothest-riding tyres around. They ride with a magical smoothness at 90 - 95 lbs and the grip is absolutely amazing (I ground a chamfer on the outside of my pedal recently in an informal race, cornering hard) and although they are quite flimsy, lightweight tyres, I don't think we suffer punctures any more often than anybody else. It might be a different story if we commuted and needed reliability on glass-strewn surfaces though.

This is what we use; we get a pair for £26 each: http://www.ribblecycles.co.uk/veloflex-corsa-folding-tyre-twinpack-veloflex/
 
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