Illness name: carpal tunnel syndrome
Description:
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is pressure on a nerve in your wrist. It causes tingling, numbness and pain in your hand and fingers. You can often treat it yourself, but it can take months to get better.
The symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome include:
These symptoms often start slowly and come and go. They're usually worse at night.
CTS sometimes gets better by itself in a few months, particularly if you have it because you're pregnant.
A wrist splint is something you wear on your hand to keep your wrist straight. It helps to relieve pressure on the nerve.
You wear it at night while you sleep. You'll have to wear a splint for at least 4 weeks before it starts to feel better.
You can buy wrist splints online or from pharmacies.
Stop or cut down on anything that causes you to frequently bend your wrist or grip hard, such as using vibrating tools for work or playing an instrument.
Painkillers like
paracetamol
or
ibuprofen
may help carpal tunnel pain short-term.
But there's little evidence to say they can treat the cause of CTS, so it's important not to rely on them.
There's a small amount of evidence to suggest hand exercises help ease the symptoms of CTS.
A GP can usually diagnose CTS by asking about your symptoms and checking your hand.
If they're not sure it's CTS, they may refer you to hospital for tests, such as an ultrasound scan.
If a wrist splint does not help, the GP might recommend a steroid injection into your wrist. This brings down swelling around the nerve, easing the symptoms of CTS.
Steroid injections are not always a cure. CTS can come back after a few months and you may need another injection.
If your CTS is getting worse and other treatments have not worked, the GP might refer you to a specialist to discuss surgery.
Surgery usually cures CTS. You and your specialist will decide together if it's the right treatment for you.
An injection numbs your wrist so you do not feel pain (local anaesthetic) and a small cut is made in your hand. The carpal tunnel inside your wrist is cut so it no longer puts pressure on the nerve.
The operation takes around 20 minutes and you do not have to stay in hospital overnight.
It can take a month after the operation to get back to normal activities.
CTS happens when the carpal tunnel inside your wrist swells and squeezes 1 of your nerves (median nerve).
You're more at risk if you:
Page last reviewed: 16 February 2021
Carpal tunnel syndrome
Check if you have carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS)
How to treat carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) yourself
Wear a wrist splint
Stop or cut down on things that may be causing it
Painkillers
Hand exercises
Non-urgent advice:
See a GP if:
What happens at your appointment
Treatment for carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) from a GP
Carpal tunnel syndrome surgery
What causes carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS)
Next review due: 16 February 2024