The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

That pregnancy hand numbness is trapped fluid squeezing a nerve, not damage, and it usually clears after birth.

Tonight, sleep in a neutral wrist splint that keeps the wrist straight, and keep it straight during the day too.

  1. Here's what's really happening: extra pregnancy fluid raises the pressure inside a rigid tunnel at your wrist and squeezes the nerve to your thumb-side fingers.
  2. The myth that won't die: vitamin B6 does not fix it, and high doses can actually damage nerves.
  3. Start here: wear a neutral wrist splint at night and keep your wrist straight during the day.

Your wrist has a tunnel with rigid walls, and a nerve runs through it like a cable in a packed conduit. Late in pregnancy your body holds extra water, and some pools in that tunnel, raising the pressure until the cable gets pinched. That is a flood in a fixed-size space, not a frayed cable, which is why draining the flood after birth usually fixes it.

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.

Elbow & Wrist · Median Nerve

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome in Pregnancy

The numbness and night-time tingling in your hand is trapped fluid pressing on a nerve at your wrist. For most women, it eases after the baby arrives.

CONVICTION: MODERATE
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The Protocol

What Works

Conservative care first. Everything in Tier 1 has zero risk to the baby and is fully reversible. The trial evidence is small and mostly borrowed from general carpal tunnel care, so treat the parameters as sensible defaults, not proven prescriptions.

Cinematic anatomy of conservative wrist treatment

1. Neutral nocturnal wrist splint MODERATE

A neutral-position splint worn at night, plus during provoking daytime activity. Targets the dominant symptom (night tingling) at zero fetal risk.

Night splint every night + provoking activities · exact wear-hours not standardized in pregnancy

2. Nerve & tendon gliding (home exercise) MODERATE

Gentle self-administered glides that help the nerve move and settle. One small trial in pregnant women improved symptoms and function versus no exercise.

Exercise Prescription

Median nerve glide 5–10 slow glides · 2–3× daily · gentle, never force into sharp tingling
Tendon glide (fist → straight → hook → tabletop) 5–10 cycles · 2–3× daily
Wrist-neutral habit all day · driving, phone, sleep · splint does this at night

3. Reassurance + planned postpartum review MODERATE

Most cases improve after delivery. Counsel that, but book a review so the minority who persist are not lost to follow-up.

Reserve & last-resort options (Tier 2–3)

Ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injection MODERATE

Reserved for severe or persistent symptoms that don't respond to splinting. Studied with or without a concurrent splint, in a specialist setting with informed consent.

Surgical decompression MODERATE-HIGH (to defer)

Rarely needed during pregnancy. A national register shows the surgical burden concentrates in the year after delivery. Reserve for progressive thumb-muscle weakness or genuinely refractory cases; otherwise defer to postpartum.

What Doesn't Work

  • Cupping, Kinesio-taping, laser as treatments. They show only short-term change on a condition that mostly settles on its own. Not first-line, not "treatment."
  • Vitamin B6. A stubborn folk remedy with no quality evidence of benefit, and high doses cause nerve damage. The opposite of what you want.
  • Diagnosing on a nerve test alone. Many pregnant women have a slightly slowed nerve with no symptoms, so the test by itself doesn't prove the disease.

⚠ Red Flags — Get Assessed

Cinematic anatomy of the wrist and median nerve
  • Sudden, severe, fast-worsening hand pain or numbness. This can be an acute blocked artery in the wrist, a genuine emergency, not gradual pregnancy carpal tunnel.
  • The muscle at the base of your thumb is shrinking, or your grip is getting weak. That signals severe nerve compression that should not be watched and waited.
  • Numbness that is not in the thumb-side fingers, affects the whole hand, or comes with other neurological symptoms. It may be a different problem.
  • New marked swelling with a bad headache, vision changes, or high blood pressure. Tell your maternity team. This is a screen for preeclampsia, which is about your pregnancy, not your wrist.

Refer to: your obstetric team first for any pregnancy red flag. Hand surgery or neurology for thumb-muscle weakness or suspected acute carpal tunnel. A&E if a sudden vascular emergency is suspected.

Tonight, sleep in a neutral wrist splint that holds your wrist straight, and keep it straight during the day too.

A bent wrist raises the pressure on the nerve, which is why symptoms peak at night. A splint is cheap, safe in pregnancy, and targets the worst of it. If any red flag above applies, book an assessment instead of waiting.

Costs a few pounds. No equipment, no prep.

Recovery Markers

Return to Full Use

The signs that the nerve has settled, especially relevant if you returned to wrist-loaded training postpartum.

CONVICTION: MODERATE

The direction is solid: pregnancy carpal tunnel is real, common, fluid-driven, and mostly settles after birth, and conservative care is the right first move. The reason it isn't HIGH is that the treatment trials are small, unblinded, and largely borrowed from general carpal tunnel care, and the studies genuinely disagree on how many women stay symptomatic.

What would change the "splint + gliding" recommendation

A properly sized, blinded trial in third-trimester women comparing splint plus gliding against a sham, measured both during pregnancy and 12 weeks after birth (to separate the treatment from natural recovery), would either lock this in or overturn it.

What would settle the "most resolve" question

A study following 300+ women out to a year after delivery, tracking both symptoms and nerve tests, would pin down exactly how large the persistent minority really is. Right now the small studies conflict.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

Cinematic anatomy of the carpal tunnel and median nerve

The carpal tunnel is a small canal at the wrist, walled by hard wrist bones underneath and a tough ligament across the top. The nerve to your thumb side fingers, plus nine tendons, all squeeze through it. Because the walls don't stretch, anything that adds volume inside raises the pressure on the nerve.

In pregnancy the driver is fluid. Your body holds more water, peaking in the last trimester, and some collects in that fixed-size tunnel. The pressure pinches the nerve and starves it of blood flow, which is the tingling and numbness. This is different from the carpal tunnel an office worker or builder gets, which is driven by years of repetitive load and a naturally tight tunnel. The fluid story is the good news: when the swelling drains after birth, the pressure drops and the nerve usually recovers.

How to Identify It

Cinematic anatomy of wrist assessment

The pattern is the tell: numbness and tingling in the thumb, index, middle, and half the ring finger, sparing the little finger, worst at night, and you shake the hand to wake it up. Onset is usually in the last trimester. Diagnosis is clinical. Nerve tests confirm and grade it but are less useful here, because many pregnant women have a slightly slowed nerve with no symptoms. Ultrasound is a good, radiation-free way to confirm it in pregnancy.

  • Phalen's test Sn/Sp: pregnancy-specific data unavailable — hold the wrist bent ~60s, positive if it reproduces the tingling
  • Carpal compression test Sn/Sp: pregnancy-specific data unavailable — sustained thumb pressure over the tunnel, positive if symptoms come on
  • Median nerve ultrasound — measures the nerve's cross-section, radiation-free, useful in pregnancy
Cinematic anatomy of differential diagnosis

Not everything in a pregnant hand or wrist is carpal tunnel. Thumb-side wrist pain is more likely de Quervain's ("mommy thumb"). Outer-thigh numbness is meralgia paresthetica, a different trapped nerve that also rises in pregnancy. Symptoms that start in the neck point to a nerve root, not the wrist.

The Debate

There is no clinical guideline written specifically for pregnancy carpal tunnel. The general carpal tunnel guideline isn't pregnancy-tailored, so the management is mostly extrapolated.

Does it all resolve after birth?

Optimistic series (PMID 20976778, 15830965)

Pregnancy carpal tunnel largely resolves postpartum; conservative care is enough.

vs

Persistence data (PMID 12115984, 17918501)

A real share of women stay symptomatic, with abnormal nerve tests, at long-term follow-up.

Both are true. Reassure about the good odds, but don't promise universal recovery, and book a postpartum review so the persistent minority isn't missed.

Honest Limitations

Natural recovery muddies every uncontrolled study

The research: single-arm studies report "treatment improved symptoms."

The gap: pregnancy carpal tunnel improves on its own after birth, so any uncontrolled "improvement" is partly just time passing. Only trials that follow women across delivery can separate treatment from natural recovery.

Pregnancy evidence is borrowed evidence

The research: the splint / gliding / injection ladder.

The gap: it's largely imported from non-pregnant carpal tunnel care. The two pregnancy-specific trials are small, single-center, and unblinded. So the parameters are reasonable defaults, not validated prescriptions.

The Nuance

Cinematic anatomy of clinical decision pathway

Surgery is the exception, not the plan. A Finland national register covering 1999 to 2017 found that nerve decompression surgery is uncommon during pregnancy and clusters in the year after delivery. That confirms what good practice already does: manage conservatively, screen hard for the severe minority, and defer any surgery to postpartum where possible.

The two things that flip the plan from "wait and splint" to "act now" are weakness or wasting of the thumb-base muscle, and a sudden, severe, fast-worsening attack. The first means the compression is severe; the second can be an acute blocked artery. Neither should be watched and waited.

Evidence

Sources

Educational self-management guidance, not personalized medical treatment. Pregnancy is a medically supervised state. Discuss any new or worsening symptoms, and any treatment beyond a splint, with your obstetric and medical team.

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