The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

You can't make a worn thumb joint new again — but a splint and smarter loading can stop it hurting.

Today, press the base of your thumb gently into your palm and twist. Sharp, gritty pain right at the base (not up at the wrist) points to thumb-base arthritis — and the first move is a supportive thumb splint you'll actually wear, plus easing off hard pinch grips.

  1. Here's what's really happening: it's the most common arthritis joint in the hand, and the joint isn't just worn — it's loosened, so it slips when you pinch.
  2. What most people get wrong: thinking a splint and exercises will give the grip back — they reliably cut pain and slightly help strength, but they don't restore full hand function, and that's an honest promise worth making.
  3. Start here: wear a comfortable thumb splint (soft works as well as rigid) and change how you load the thumb — that does most of the work.

The base of your thumb is a tiny saddle held steady by stretchy straps. Years of pinching stretch the straps, so the bones drift and rub on a smaller patch — that grinding is the pain. You can't un-stretch the straps, but bracing the saddle and pinching less takes the load off the raw spot so it calms down.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Hand · Base of Thumb · Trapeziometacarpal Joint

Thumb Base Arthritis

The small saddle joint at the base of your thumb wears and loosens, so it grinds and slips when you pinch. You can't make it new again — but you can support it so it stops hurting.

Conviction: Moderate

What Works

Conservative care is the universal first step, and it's the part a physical therapist owns. The goal is to support and offload the joint, not to rebuild it.

Cinematic view of a hand and thumb supported and at rest

Tier 1 — Strongest Direction MODERATE

A thumb splint you'll actually wear. Custom rigid thermoplastic or soft neoprene — they're equal for pain, so comfort and wear-time win. Worn for painful tasks and at night. Pain benefit shows over 3–12 months of real wear.

Joint protection + load changes. Cut sustained, forceful pinch (jar lids, keys, pens, phone pinch-grip). Use jar openers, built-up grips, and leverage tools.

Exercise Prescription

Thumb opposition "O to C"
3 × 10 slow reps · daily
Touch thumb tip to the base of your little finger to make an "O," then open into a wide "C." Gentle stretch, no sharp pinch pain.
First dorsal interosseous activation (thumb-side stabilizer)
3 × 10 (5-second holds) · daily
Press the side of your index finger outward against your other hand, thumb relaxed. You should feel the muscle on the back of the hand work, not joint pain.
Light resisted pinch (sponge or putty)
3 × 10 · most days
Gently pinch and release. Effort, not a flare. Ease off if it aches for more than a day.
See Tier 2 & Tier 3 options

Tier 2 — Moderate / promising add-ons

Thumb-stabilizer strengthening (above) MODERATE, balance/position-sense training for the joint LOW-MOD, and light hands-on therapy as an adjunct LOW-MOD. If pain blocks rehab, a referred joint injection can be a short-term bridge LOW.

Tier 3 — Experimental

PRP or fat injections LOW — an early pain signal, but the evidence is immature and there's no standard protocol. Commercial interest is ahead of the data.

What Doesn't Work

  • Promising restored grip and dexterity. The strongest evidence shows pain improves and strength improves a little, but hand function barely moves. Overpromising loses the patient.
  • Defaulting to repeated steroid injections. In one careful analysis, a saline injection matched or beat the steroid — and repeated steroid isn't harmless.
  • Insisting on the bulkiest rigid splint. A comfortable soft splint works as well for pain and actually gets worn. Adherence beats rigidity.

Return to Training

Offload the thumb while it settles, then rebuild grip tolerance gradually. Tick these off before pushing hard pinch tasks again.

In the gym: use straps on heavy pulls to offload thumb pinch, avoid hard pinch/crush grip during a flare, and keep everything that doesn't grind the joint.

Red Flags — When to Get Checked Urgently

Thumb base arthritis is rarely dangerous. But don't miss these.

Cinematic anatomical view of the hand and thumb base
  • The joint goes hot, red, swollen and you feel unwell — same-day care to rule out joint infection. Do not just splint it and wait.
  • Many joints hurt at once, with long morning stiffness, swelling, or it's spreading fast — this may be inflammatory arthritis, not wear-and-tear, and needs a different work-up.
  • Numbness or pins-and-needles in the thumb, index and middle finger — the nerve may be trapped too (carpal tunnel can travel with this).
  • Pain stays disabling despite months of splinting and load changes, or the thumb gets stuck bent — time for a surgical opinion.

Refer to: GP / rheumatology for an inflammatory screen · hand surgery for stubborn or advanced disease · urgent care for a hot, swollen joint.

Today: press the base of your thumb gently into your palm and twist. Sharp, gritty pain right at the base — not up at the wrist — points to thumb base arthritis.

If that's your pain, the first move is a supportive thumb splint you'll actually wear, plus easing off hard pinch grips like jar lids and keys. That takes the load off the raw spot.

Takes less than a minute. No equipment needed.

Conviction: Moderate

Conservative care first, with the job being recognize, stage, offload, and refer. The evidence base is deep but mostly abstract-level and surgery-heavy, and the headline splint findings are graded low-certainty.

What's solid: conservative-before-surgery, and that splinting reduces pain. What's softer: how much it helps strength, and whether exercise restores function (the trials are small and women-only).

What would change this verdict?

A large trial including men, comparing a splint plus a structured thumb-stability and balance program against a splint alone, followed for a year and measured on hand function — a real function gain would shift the message from "offload for pain" to "offload and re-stabilize for function."

What about the injection question?

A blinded trial cleanly separating a steroid injection from a saline injection at six months and beyond would settle whether steroid is worth defaulting to. Right now, it isn't clearly better.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

Cinematic anatomical view of the thumb base saddle joint

The joint at the base of your thumb (the trapeziometacarpal, or CMC-1, joint) is a saddle joint — two saddle-shaped surfaces that let your thumb move in almost every direction. That mobility is exactly why it's vulnerable: it relies on ligaments and small thumb muscles for stability, not on a deep bony socket.

With age and years of pinching, the main stabilizing ligament on the palm side stretches out. The base of the thumb bone then drifts sideways and backward (it partly slips out of place), so the load concentrates on a smaller patch of cartilage. That cartilage wears, and over time the joint collapses into a "zigzag" shape — the base pulls in while the next knuckle bends back to compensate. It's degenerative and unstable, which is why supporting it and strengthening the stabilizers actually helps.

How to Identify It

Cinematic view of a clinician examining the thumb base

It's a clinical diagnosis — you usually don't need a scan unless surgery is on the table.

  • Pain right at the base of the thumb, worse with pinch and grip (jars, keys, pens, buttons)
  • Tenderness over the joint, sometimes a visible squaring or bump at the thumb base
  • Grinding or weakness when you pinch; in later stages the thumb looks collapsed

Grind test good at ruling IN, weak at ruling OUT — the examiner presses and gently twists the thumb metacarpal into the joint; sharp pain ± grinding is a positive.

Finkelstein test rules OUT the look-alike — if pain is at the wrist-side bony bump (radial styloid) with thumb-in-fist, that's De Quervain's tendon pain, the most common misdiagnosis, not the joint. The two can coexist.

Exact sensitivity/specificity numbers for these thumb tests weren't available in this evidence sweep, so they're described by direction rather than fabricated percentages.

The Debate

No condition-specific clinical guideline exists for thumb base arthritis as of June 2026 — care leans on general osteoarthritis guidance plus the hand-therapy evidence.

Older view (2015 review) vs newer pooling (Cantero-Téllez 2024, 19 studies, n=1477)
Then: splints reduce pain but don't touch strength. Now: a larger analysis found small grip and pinch strength gains too — but still no hand-function improvement (function p=0.54), and the certainty is graded low.
Follow the newer direction, hold the magnitudes loosely, and keep the honest line: pain yes, function barely.
Convention vs evidence on injections (nonsurgical review, PMID 31600038)
Convention: a steroid injection is the standard early shot. Evidence: a plain saline injection matched or beat the steroid when checked under imaging — much of the benefit is the injection event itself.
Don't treat steroid as the evidence-backed default; use it sparingly and cap repeats.

Honest Limitations

Function is the stubborn endpoint

Conservative care reliably moves pain and slightly moves strength, but hand function barely changes. The honest message is pain control and slowing decline, not restored grip.

The exercise trials are small and women-only

The balance/strengthening studies were single-center and female-only (around 22–52 people each). The direction should transfer to men — it's a mechanical joint — but the trials didn't test them.

No agreed yardstick

There's no agreed "how much pain change counts" threshold and no standard outcome set for this condition, so pooled numbers are soft. Judge change against the person's own baseline.

The Nuance

Cinematic anatomical view representing treatment decisions for the thumb

Most people never need surgery. Conservative care won't give you a new joint, but it reliably reduces pain and keeps the hand working, and surgery is reserved for when it genuinely fails.

When conservative care does fail or the joint is far gone, surgery works — and here's the honest part: no single technique is clearly best (2026 Cochrane review). Trapeziectomy (removing the small wrist bone the thumb sits on) is the durable, low-complication default. Joint replacement gives faster early recovery and an early-pain edge, but pays for it with more complications and revisions. And adding ligament reconstruction to a trapeziectomy gives no consistent extra benefit — simpler is often equal. Which operation is the surgeon's and patient's call, not a settled "winner."

Sources

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