Hand & Wrist Tendonitis
Hand and wrist tendonitis — inflammation or degeneration of the tendons in and around the hand and wrist — is a common cause of pain, stiffness, and reduced grip strength. It can affect workers, athletes, musicians, and parents alike. While specific conditions such as De Quervain's tenosynovitis and trigger finger have dedicated pages on our site, a broader range of tendinopathy affecting the wrist extensors, wrist flexors, and finger tendons responds well to targeted non-operative treatment and expert hand care.
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What is hand & wrist tendonitis?
Hand and wrist tendonitis, more accurately tendinopathy, is painful irritation and degeneration of a tendon from repetitive overload, injury, or age-related wear. Common forms include de Quervain's and trigger finger. Symptoms include pain with movement, swelling, and stiffness, and most cases improve with rest, therapy, and injections.
Tendonitis (or more accurately, tendinopathy) refers to painful degeneration and inflammation of a tendon where it has been subjected to repetitive overload, acute injury, or age-related wear. The tendons most commonly affected include:
- Wrist extensor tendons (especially ECRL, ECRB at the dorsal wrist) — associated with repetitive gripping, lifting, and dorsiflexion
- Wrist flexor tendons (FCR and FCU) — associated with repetitive flexion and ulnar deviation
- Flexor and extensor tendons of the fingers — from sustained fine motor tasks, typing, or gripping
This page covers general hand/wrist tendinopathy not better classified as De Quervain's tenosynovitis (first dorsal compartment) or trigger finger (flexor tendon sheath stenosis), which have their own pages. If you have thumb-side wrist pain or a finger that catches or locks, those specific pages may be more relevant.
Intersection Syndrome — a related condition where the APL and EPB cross the radial wrist extensors approximately 4–6 cm above the wrist — produces a distinctive crunching crepitus ("squeaker's wrist") and dorsal forearm pain, often confused with De Quervain's.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is tendonitis the same as tendinopathy?
How is this different from De Quervain's or trigger finger?
Can I exercise with tendonitis?
What treatments are available if rest and anti-inflammatories are not helping my hand or wrist tendonitis?
Can hand and wrist tendonitis become permanent if I ignore it?
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Related conditions
References
- de Vos RJ, Windt J, Weir A. Strong evidence against platelet-rich plasma injections for chronic lateral epicondylar tendinopathy. British Journal of Sports Medicine. 2014;48(12):952–956. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2013-093281
- Khan KM, Cook JL, Kannus P, Maffulli N, Bonar SF. Time to abandon the "tendinitis" myth. BMJ. 2002;324(7338):626–627. doi:10.1136/bmj.324.7338.626
- Huisstede BM, Gladdines S, Randsdorp MS, Koes BW. Effectiveness of conservative, surgical, and postsurgical interventions for trigger finger, Dupuytren disease, and De Quervain disease. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 2018;99(8):1635–1649.e21. doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2017.07.014
- Lohrer H, Nauck T, Konerding MA. Cross-linked versus native collagen injections for the treatment of lateral and medial epicondylitis — a prospective case series. Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume). 2012;37(1):62–68. doi:10.1177/1753193411414532
