Wrist & Forearm Pain
Wrist and forearm pain is driven by repetitive grip, typing, tool use, and loading in flexion or extension — push-ups, front squats, deadlifts. Carpal tunnel syndrome, tendinitis, and general forearm fatigue all respond well to targeted tissue work and progressive loading.
Fitness Considerations
The forearm contains over 20 muscles packed into a small space, all sharing tight fascial compartments. When these tissues get stiff and adhered, they compress the nerves and tendons running through them — producing the numbness, tingling, and aching associated with conditions like carpal tunnel.
Wrist pain often involves restrictions at the elbow (tight forearm extensors) or shoulder (nerve tension from the brachial plexus). Don’t just treat the wrist — check the entire arm. The protocols here include forearm and elbow work for this reason.
Tendon pain (tendinitis, tendinosis) doesn’t resolve with rest alone — tendons need progressive, controlled load to remodel. Once acute pain subsides, wrist curls, reverse curls, and grip work at low intensity rebuild the tissue stronger than before.
Prescriptions
| # | Protocol | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 54.01 | Wrist Pain & Carpal Tunnel | Forearm release, nerve gliding, and wrist mobilization protocol |