Skip to content

De Quervains Tenosynovitis (MSK Patient Portal)

https://nhsaaa.archive.nhsscotland.net/media/7534/hover_wrists.jpg?width=363&height=222

De Quervains Tenosynovistis 

Another condition called De Quervain’s tenosynovitis/syndrome can also give you pain in and around the thumb. If you have been told by a health care professional that you have De Quervain’s, please read on. 

If you have thumb pain but are unsure whether your symptoms are due to De Quervain’s or Osteoarthritis the following information may help the diagnosis. Don’t worry if you unsure as most of the advice given is similar for both conditions. 

De Quervains Syndrome 

What is it? 

De Quervain’s Syndrome is a painful condition that affects the tendons that run through a tunnel on the thumb side of the wrist. 

Diagram 1: Picture of Where De Quervains is Located 

What is the cause? 

It appears without obvious cause in many cases. New mums of small babies seem particularly prone to it, but whether this is due to hormonal changes after pregnancy or due to lifting the baby repeatedly is not known. There is little evidence that it is caused by work activities, but the pain can certainly be aggravated by hand use at work, at home, in the garden or when participating in sport. 

  What are the symptoms? 

  • Pain on the thumb side of the wrist, as shown in the diagram. Pain is aggravated especially by lifting the thumb, for example when using scissors or giving a ‘thumbs up’. 
  • Tenderness if you press on the site of pain. 
  • Swelling around the site of pain; compare it with same spot on the opposite wrist. 
  • Clicking or snapping of the tendons occurs occasionally. 

De Quervain Syndrome myths versus facts 

 Myth 1   I will need an operation to fix my problem. 

Fact 1   The majority of people respond well to a steroid injection and advice and most do not require surgery. 

What is the treatment? 

 De Quervain’s syndrome is not harmful, but it can be a very painful nuisance. Some mild cases recover over a few weeks without treatment. 

Treatment options are: 

  • Avoiding activities that cause pain, if possible 
  • Using a wrist/thumb splint, which can often be obtained from a pharmacy, sports shop, a health care professional or online. It needs to immobilise the thumb as well as the wrist. 

Diagram 2: Splint for De Quervains (Wrist and Thumb Spica) 

  • A steroid injection relieves the pain in about 70% of cases. The risks of injection are small, but it very occasionally causes some thinning or colour change in the skin at the site of injection. Click HERE for more information regarding corticosteroid injections 

Click HERE for a printable version of this section