totally. If you have an injury or had one. Take time off until it fully heals. Or you could face some serious pain.
Not really, to tone your biceps you need to be lifting heavy weights so that you put stress on your muscles, your muscle will then grow bigger to adapt to the amount of stress you are putting on the muscle.
Stress on the muscles forces adaptation, or hypertrophy of the muscles to the activity. To continue growth, you must continue to increase the stress of the exercise such as lifting more weights.
Exercise gloves are most typically used in activities that may involve stress on lifting heavy weights. They may prevent blistering of the hands from repetitive exercise.
Our bodies grow and change as they need to (at least to an extent). If your body is lifting more weight and putting more stress on the bones, it will slowly strengthen the bones to handle the new loads. Its the same reason lifting builds muscle; we need it so our bodies provide.
preexisting medical conditions
You should stop lifting weights if you have a pain in your right elbow. Try not lifting weights for 2-3 days to see if the pain fades or not. If you keep adding stress to that elbow it'll need serious operation done to it. Check out the site below for further info : www.livestrong.com/article/76858-weightlifting-elbow-pain/.
there is no difference
Sports and Computers
Weight training will force your body to adapt to the stress(weights) that you put on it. your bodu responds by building more muscle protein which will make you weigh more, don't let this discourage you from training however) remember BMI is nonsense.
Fracture acute
Stress can be the cause for hemorrhoids, not exactly stress by all means but Lifting heavy objects regularly as well as playing strenuous sports or taking high-stress exercises (e.g. weight lifting, mountain motor bike riding etc) are also among hemroids causes since they increase pressure on the vessels including rectal veins.
There are a number of ways to assess stress but connecting that in a quantitative way to the rate of injury or disease has not been developed to a level that doing so is useful in dealing with any one particular workplace. Most agree that a more stressful workplace is one that is more likely to have a higher rate of injury and stress-related disease, and reducing stress is a good thing to do. But for injury reduction, mistake-proofing various functions is usually a more productive approach, and more readily quantified and justified than a single focus on stress.