Thumb CMC Osteoarthritis

Pain at the base of the thumb — the aching, weakness, and loss of grip that makes jar lids, door handles, and lifting feel disproportionately difficult — is the signature of thumb carpometacarpal osteoarthritis. It affects up to 15% of women over 50 and is often dismissed as an inevitable part of ageing. The research, and our clinical experience, tells a more useful story.

Written by Dr Steven Hewitt — Chiropractor · AHPRA: CHI0001115420 · Last reviewed: May 2026

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What Is Thumb CMC Osteoarthritis?

The thumb carpometacarpal (CMC) joint — also called the trapeziometacarpal joint — is the saddle-shaped joint at the base of the thumb where the first metacarpal meets the trapezium bone of the wrist. Its unique saddle geometry gives the thumb its extraordinary range of motion: opposition, circumduction, pinch, and power grip.

This same geometry makes the joint mechanically demanding. Osteoarthritis (OA) at the thumb CMC develops through gradual deterioration of the articular cartilage, ligamentous laxity (particularly the anterior oblique ligament), osteophyte formation, and progressive subluxation of the first metacarpal. As the joint degenerates, the thenar muscles and the thumb's force-generating capacity are compromised.

FeatureDetail
Joint affectedFirst carpometacarpal (trapeziometacarpal) joint
PrevalenceUp to 7% of men, 15% of women over 50
Risk factorsFemale sex, age, post-menopausal period, repetitive thumb loading, family history
PresentationBasal thumb pain, weakness in pinch and grip, joint enlargement, pain with key pinch and jar opening
ImagingX-ray shows joint space narrowing, osteophytes, subluxation in advanced stages

Who Typically Experiences This?

Women in Midlife and Beyond

Thumb CMC OA is strongly associated with female sex and age. Post-menopausal women are disproportionately affected, likely due to changes in ligamentous laxity with oestrogen decline. The condition often begins in the fourth or fifth decade and progresses through midlife. It is frequently bilateral, though one side is usually more symptomatic.

Manual Workers and Those with High Repetitive Thumb Load

Occupations and activities involving sustained pinch grip, key pinch, or repeated thumb opposition increase cumulative joint loading. Hairdressers, teachers, physiotherapists, and those in food preparation and manufacturing are commonly affected. The combination of repetitive load and progressively less robust joint stability creates a self-perpetuating cycle.

Olympic Weightlifters and Strength Athletes

Hook grip — where the thumb is locked beneath the fingers around the barbell — generates very high forces at the thumb CMC joint, particularly during the explosive phases of the snatch and clean. Athletes who have trained with hook grip for years can present with early CMC OA at younger ages than the general population. Grip-heavy accessory work (carries, pulls, hanging work) compounds this.

Yoga and Pilates Practitioners

Weight-bearing through the hands — particularly in high-load positions like downward dog, plank, and arm balances — places the CMC joint in extension and compression simultaneously. Hypermobile practitioners who rely on passive joint range rather than active muscular control in these positions may load the CMC joint beyond what the ligamentous structures can manage over time.


The Fascial Lens: Why We See This Differently

Thumb CMC OA is a joint condition, and the cartilage changes are real. But joint degeneration is not the end of the conversation — it is, in part, a product of the mechanical environment in which the joint has operated.

The CMC joint is stabilised by a complex of ligaments embedded in the thenar compartment fascia. The thenar compartment is a fascial envelope — a fibrous chamber housing the thenar muscles, continuous with the palmar aponeurosis medially and the dorsal hand fascia laterally. How forces are distributed through the hand and wrist in pinch and grip depends substantially on the quality of this fascial system.

When the thenar fascial environment is restricted — through habitual loading patterns, scar tissue, or densification of the connective tissue — the mechanical distribution across the CMC joint changes. The joint absorbs load that would otherwise be shared across a broader tissue system. Over time, this asymmetric loading contributes to the pattern of degeneration characteristic of CMC OA.

Equally important is what happens proximally. The radial nerve — which provides sensation to the dorsum of the thumb and radial hand, and contributes motor input to the thumb extensors and abductors — passes through the lateral forearm compartment adjacent to the brachioradialis. Fascial restriction along this path can sensitise the neural environment at the base of the thumb, contributing to pain sensitivity that exceeds what the joint alone would produce.

This is directly supported by the Villafañe et al. (2013) RCT, in which a manual therapy protocol combining joint mobilisation, neural mobilisation targeting the radial nerve, and exercise produced significantly better pain outcomes than sham treatment — with all group differences exceeding the minimal clinically important difference. [1] The neural mobilisation component of that protocol connects directly to the fascial entrapment model: reducing mechanical restriction along the radial nerve's fascial sleeve reduces the neural hypersensitivity that amplifies joint pain.


What Does the Research Say?

A combination of joint mobilisation, neural mobilisation, and exercise produces clinically meaningful pain reduction in thumb CMC OA. A double-blind randomised controlled trial (Villafañe, Cleland & Fernández-de-las-Peñas, 2013) allocated 60 patients with CMC OA to either a multimodal manual therapy protocol (joint mobilisation + radial nerve mobilisation + exercise) or a sham intervention for 12 sessions over four weeks. The manual therapy group showed a significantly greater reduction in pain at the end of treatment and at 1- and 2-month follow-up, with all group differences exceeding the minimal clinically important difference of 2.0 cm on VAS. This is level 1b evidence. [1]

Exercise-based interventions produce clinically better outcomes than no treatment at short-term follow-up. A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis (Karanasios et al.) including 14 RCTs and 1,280 patients found that exercise-based interventions significantly reduced pain (MD −21.91 on 100mm VAS; p=0.003) and wrist disability compared with no treatment at short-term follow-up. Proprioceptive exercises showed particularly favourable results compared with standard care alone. Evidence certainty was low to moderate. [2]

Neural mobilisation targeting the radial nerve reduces pain sensitivity at the thumb CMC joint. The mechanism underlying the manual therapy benefit in the Villafañe 2013 trial includes a neurophysiological component: radial nerve mobilisation is proposed to reduce central sensitisation and improve local pressure pain thresholds at the joint. This connects the fascial entrapment model directly to pain management in a degenerative joint condition. [1]


How We Approach Thumb CMC Osteoarthritis

Our assessment includes the CMC joint itself — joint mobility, pain provocation, and stability — alongside the thenar fascial environment, the radial nerve's course through the forearm, and the movement patterns the person uses for grip and pinch under load.

We aim to:

The approach is informed by the evidence: manual therapy combined with exercise produces clinically meaningful pain reduction. The goal is not to reverse cartilage degeneration — that is not what manual therapy achieves — but to improve the mechanical and neural environment so the joint functions with less pain and greater capacity.

New to Fascial Manipulation? Read how it works →

Please note: The information on this page describes our general clinical approach and is intended for educational purposes only. Individual presentations vary, and your assessment and management will be tailored specifically to you. Nothing on this page constitutes clinical advice for your individual situation. Please consult a registered health practitioner for advice about your specific condition.


What Can You Do Right Now?

1. Begin proprioceptive and thenar strengthening exercises.

Pinch strengthening (using a soft ball or therapy putty), thumb opposition exercises, and short thumb flexor training can support CMC joint stability. Begin at a load that does not provoke pain and progress gradually. The evidence for exercise in CMC OA supports proprioceptive approaches specifically — exercises that challenge joint position sense as well as force production.

2. Modify your grip strategy for daily activities.

Where possible, redistribute load away from precision pinch toward broader grip or forearm-based carrying. Use jar openers rather than bare-hand jar opening; carry bags with forearm rather than fingertip grip; use larger-handled tools and utensils. These small adaptations meaningfully reduce cumulative CMC joint loading.

3. Consider a thumb CMC support splint.

A short opponens splint that supports the CMC joint without completely immobilising the thumb can reduce pain during provocative activities. These are available from hand therapists and online suppliers. Prolonged complete immobilisation is not recommended as it reduces thenar muscle function and proprioception.

4. Review your wrist and thumb position in training.

For gym athletes, assess hook grip technique and consider whether modifications to wrist position or grip width in specific exercises can reduce peak CMC loading. Progressive loading is generally preferable to avoidance — but the progression should be informed by symptom response.


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Frequently Asked Questions

What is thumb CMC osteoarthritis and why does it cause so much pain?
Thumb CMC (carpometacarpal) osteoarthritis is degeneration of the basal joint of the thumb — the saddle-shaped joint at the base of the thumb where it meets the wrist. This joint is uniquely mobile, allowing the thumb to move across the palm for pinch and opposition, but this mobility comes at the cost of joint stability. Repeated pinch and gripping forces concentrate load at the CMC joint, and over time the cartilage degenerates, the joint becomes inflamed and stiff, and the surrounding ligaments lax. Pain with pinching, gripping jars, and turning keys is characteristic; the joint may develop a visible bony prominence as it degenerates.
Is thumb CMC osteoarthritis the same as basal joint arthritis?
Yes — 'basal joint arthritis' and 'thumb CMC arthritis' are the same condition, referring to osteoarthritis at the first carpometacarpal joint. You may also see it referred to as rhizarthrosis. It is one of the most common sites of hand osteoarthritis, particularly in women over 50, and it becomes increasingly prevalent with age. The condition exists on a spectrum from mild cartilage wear with intermittent symptoms through to significant joint destruction and instability in advanced cases.
Can exercise help thumb CMC osteoarthritis?
Yes — and the evidence supports it as first-line management. A randomised controlled trial by Villafañe et al. (2013) published in JOSPT found that targeted manual therapy and exercise produced significant improvements in pain and function in thumb CMC osteoarthritis. More recent systematic reviews confirm that strengthening the intrinsic and extrinsic thumb muscles, improving joint proprioception, and maintaining range of movement are effective strategies for managing symptoms and functional limitation. Exercise for OA works not by reversing cartilage damage but by improving the muscle support around the joint, reducing load concentration, and modulating pain.
Do I need surgery for thumb CMC osteoarthritis?
Most people with thumb CMC osteoarthritis manage well without surgery, often for many years, with conservative management including exercise, splinting, activity modification, and manual therapy. Surgery (most commonly trapezectomy — removal of the trapezium bone — with or without tendon interposition) is reserved for advanced cases where significant pain and functional limitation persist despite thorough conservative management. The decision should be made in consultation with an orthopaedic surgeon after conservative options have been properly explored.
Should I wear a splint for thumb CMC osteoarthritis?
A thumb CMC splint (often called a thumb spica or basal joint splint) stabilises the CMC joint and can significantly reduce pain during demanding activities and at night. It is a useful load management tool, particularly during flare-ups or when performing tasks that consistently aggravate the joint. However, prolonged splinting at the expense of movement is not recommended — the thumb muscles need to remain active and conditioned. The evidence supports wearing a splint for specific activities and rest rather than continuously, in combination with targeted exercise.
How does the fascial approach relate to thumb CMC osteoarthritis?
The ligamentous and capsular structures of the CMC joint are fascial tissues, and fascial densification in the thenar eminence and the radial wrist region can contribute to reduced joint mobility and altered load distribution. The fascial chain of the thumb extends proximally through the radial forearm into the lateral arm and cervical region. Our assessment considers this broader context — including the forearm fascia and cervical spine — alongside local joint assessment. While we cannot reverse cartilage degeneration, addressing fascial restrictions and improving motor control of the thumb musculature are components of management that target modifiable contributors to pain and dysfunction.

References

  1. Villafañe JH, Cleland JA, Fernández-de-las-Peñas C (2013). The Effectiveness of a Manual Therapy and Exercise Protocol in Patients With Thumb Carpometacarpal Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, 43(4), 204–213.
  2. Karanasios S, Mertyri D, Karydis F, Gioftsos G (2024). Exercise-Based Interventions Are Effective in the Management of Patients with Thumb Carpometacarpal Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials. Healthcare, 12(8), 823.