You make 12,000 mouse clicks a day.
Your fingers are counting too.
By the end of the day, your fingers burn and your wrist aches. Most people ignore these signals, until they turn into real chronic pain. There is a simple solution, in 20 minutes.
The mouse was never designed for the human body
An unnatural position, held for hours
Wrist extended, forearm in forced pronation, fingers hovering above the buttons: your hand never truly rests. The muscles and tendons are in permanent static contraction, never fully releasing.
Thousands of repetitive micro-impacts
Every click sends a micro-vibration to the flexor tendons of the fingers. Repeated 12,000 times a day, this harmless motion creates a progressive inflammation of the tendon sheaths, invisible at first, painful in the long run.
An ignored compression of the median nerve
The prolonged pressure of the wrist on the desk compresses the carpal tunnel, the narrow tunnel through which the median nerve passes. The result: numbness, tingling, then pain. This is the start of carpal tunnel syndrome.
A problem the weekend rest is no longer enough to erase
In the early stages, two days off-screen are enough to recover. But over time, the inflammation sets in, the tendons lose their elasticity and the pain becomes chronic, even without working.
RSIs: the number one work-related condition for desk workers
Repetitive Strain Injuries (RSIs) account for the vast majority of recognized work-related conditions. Screen work is explicitly among the risk factors: 3.5% of intensive computer users develop carpal tunnel syndrome, and 46% of remote workers report suffering from RSIs.
This pain starts gently: stiffness on waking, fingers that burn after a few hours, an aching wrist. Most people ignore these signals. Then one day, they settle in for good.
Recognize these symptoms? There is a simple solution.
See the solutionHow heat relieves your joints
The paraffin bath is not a wellness gimmick. It's a thermotherapy tool used for decades in physiotherapy clinics.
The heat penetrates deeply
At 45-54 °C, the paraffin maintains constant, even heat around each joint. Unlike a hot water bottle or a heating patch, it perfectly fits the shape of your hands and ensures a uniform spread of the heat.
Vasodilation boosts circulation
The heat causes the blood vessels to dilate, increasing local blood flow. This helps flush out the substances responsible for pain (lactic acid, histamine) and brings more oxygen and nutrients to tired tissues.
The occlusive effect: the skin regenerates
As it solidifies, the wax forms an airtight film that traps the heat and your skin's natural moisture. The result: your skin cells rehydrate deeply, calluses soften, and the skin of your hands regains its suppleness.
Muscle relaxation and pain relief
The heat reduces the tension in the flexor and extensor muscles of the fingers, the ones that work non-stop on a keyboard. It also triggers a pain-relieving effect by activating the thermal receptors that partially "block" the pain signals.
20 minutes of deep heat. Results from the very first session.
Discover the TheraDawn
5 situations where the paraffin bath really makes a difference
After a long day on the computer
Keyboard, mouse, trackpad: thousands of repetitive micro-movements that build up tension and inflammation in the tendons. 20 minutes of paraffin at the end of the day relaxes the tendons and gets your hands ready for tomorrow.
Joint pain and morning stiffness
Clinical studies (Physiotherapy, BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders) document an improvement in pain and mobility in people suffering from arthritis, osteoarthritis or carpal tunnel syndrome. The heat reduces the viscosity of the synovial fluid and loosens the joints.
Used by physiotherapists
In the clinic, the paraffin bath is used to prepare the mobilization of the hands and wrists before rehabilitation exercises. It is a recognized part of physiotherapy practice: this is not a gadget, it's a recognized medical tool.
Poor circulation, cold hands
Cold, numb, often "blue" hands? A sign of insufficient microcirculation. The heat of the paraffin bath causes a local vasodilation that restarts peripheral circulation, ideal in winter or for sedentary lifestyles.
Prevention: act before the pain sets in
As part of a weekly routine, the paraffin bath keeps the joints supple and reduces the build-up of tension before the symptoms become chronic. Like stretching for an athlete: you don't wait for the injury.
"Most of my patients who suffer from carpal tunnel or wrist tendinitis are working people who spend 8 to 10 hours a day in front of a screen. The problem is that they wait until they're in pain to seek help. I recommend the paraffin bath as a preventive measure from the very first signs: morning stiffness, fingers that "burn" after a few hours of work. 20 minutes in the evening is enough to relieve the tendons and restart circulation. It's simple, effective, and it stops things from turning into a real condition."
Recommended by physiotherapists. Available at home for €124.99.
Order nowDo you recognize yourself?
You work 6+ hours a day on a computer and your fingers or wrists ache at the end of the day
You use a mouse intensively and feel tension in your wrist or forearm
Your fingers are stiff in the morning or after a long period of inactivity
You often have cold hands or a feeling of numbness
Your skin is dry, your heels cracked and your moisturizers don't last long
You want to take care of your joints now, not wait until you're in pain
TheraDawn - The professional paraffin bath
A professional-grade device, the one physiotherapists use, for your hands and feet, to use at home whenever you want. Precise temperature control, complete kit included. 20 minutes. Immediate result.
- Digital LCD screen, precise temperature 45-54 °C
- Complete kit: mitts, fabric socks + 100 disposable gloves
- Ready to use, right from the first session
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