Scaphoid Fracture Rehab - PT Effect

Scaphoid Fracture Rehab Orthopedic Physical Therapy

Scaphoid fracture rehab can help after a broken wrist bone causes pain, stiffness, swelling, weakness, reduced grip strength, limited wrist motion, or difficulty typing, lifting, gripping, pushing, pulling, exercising, working, and using the hand comfortably. Physical therapy after a scaphoid fracture may help restore wrist mobility, rebuild strength, improve hand and forearm mechanics, and guide a safer return to daily activity.

Physical Therapy for Scaphoid Fracture Rehab

A scaphoid fracture is a break in one of the small wrist bones located near the base of the thumb. This injury commonly happens after a fall onto an outstretched hand, sports injury, bike crash, skateboarding fall, or direct trauma to the wrist. Symptoms may include pain on the thumb side of the wrist, tenderness in the area known as the anatomical snuffbox, swelling, stiffness, weakness, reduced grip strength, or difficulty using the hand and wrist normally.

Physical therapy for scaphoid fracture rehab is not one-size-fits-all. The right treatment plan depends on the fracture location, healing stage, whether surgery was performed, immobilization time, pain level, wrist range of motion, thumb mobility, grip strength, work demands, sport demands, and medical recommendations. A physical therapy evaluation can help determine how to safely restore motion, rebuild strength, and return to normal hand and wrist use.

What is Scaphoid Fracture Rehab?

Scaphoid fracture rehab is the process of restoring wrist mobility, thumb mobility, forearm strength, grip strength, wrist stability, and functional hand use after a break in the scaphoid bone. Some scaphoid fractures are treated without surgery using a cast, splint, brace, or activity modification. Others may require surgery with a screw or other fixation depending on the fracture location, alignment, healing concerns, and medical recommendations.

Recovery can vary based on fracture severity, blood supply to the fracture area, healing timeline, age, activity goals, and whether nearby ligaments, tendons, or nerves were affected. Because scaphoid fractures can be slow to heal and may require careful protection, physical therapy should follow medical guidance while gradually restoring useful motion, strength, and confidence.

What causes a Scaphoid Fracture?

A scaphoid fracture is commonly caused by trauma, such as falling onto an outstretched hand, landing awkwardly during sports, a bike or skateboard crash, a slip and fall, a workplace injury, or a direct blow to the wrist. Pain may be mistaken for a wrist sprain at first, especially if swelling is mild, but persistent thumb-side wrist pain after a fall should be medically evaluated.

Contributing factors during recovery may include pain-related guarding, swelling, immobilization, reduced wrist mobility, thumb stiffness, grip weakness, forearm weakness, shoulder or elbow stiffness, fear of using the hand, work demands, sport demands, or returning to lifting and weight-bearing too quickly. A physical therapist can help identify which factors need to be addressed while respecting the healing timeline of the bone.

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Common concerns after a Scaphoid Fracture

Symptoms and limitations after a scaphoid fracture depend on the fracture location, healing stage, swelling, pain level, immobilization time, whether surgery was performed, and how long the wrist was protected. Rehab should be based on medical clearance, symptom response, and your specific goals rather than a generic timeline.

Thumb-side wrist pain, swelling, bruising, or tenderness

Pain and tenderness on the thumb side of the wrist are common after a scaphoid fracture. The wrist may feel sore, bruised, swollen, stiff, or sensitive when the hand moves, when pressure is placed near the base of the thumb, or when gripping and lifting. Some people notice tenderness in the anatomical snuffbox or pain when loading the wrist.

This symptom pattern may be influenced by bone healing, soft tissue irritation, swelling, bruising, immobilization, and muscle guarding. Early rehab often focuses on protecting the fracture, maintaining safe motion in nearby areas, and gradually restoring wrist and thumb movement when cleared.

Common signs of thumb-side wrist pain, swelling, bruising, or tenderness
  • Pain near the thumb side of the wrist or base of the thumb
  • Tenderness around the anatomical snuffbox area
  • Swelling, bruising, or soreness after a fall or impact
  • Discomfort when gripping, lifting, typing, dressing, or using the hand
  • Symptoms that improve with support, rest, or protected positioning
How physical therapy may help wrist pain and tenderness

Physical therapy may help by teaching safe movement strategies, maintaining mobility in the fingers, thumb, elbow, and shoulder, reducing unnecessary guarding, and gradually restoring wrist motion as healing allows. Your therapist may also help you understand what activities should be limited while the bone heals.

Wrist stiffness or limited bending and straightening

Wrist stiffness is common after a scaphoid fracture, especially after time in a cast, splint, or brace. You may notice difficulty bending the wrist forward or backward, typing comfortably, lifting objects, pushing up from a chair, doing push-ups or planks, dressing, cooking, or returning to exercise.

Stiffness may be related to swelling, immobilization, joint irritation, scar tissue after surgery, muscle guarding, or reduced movement after the injury. Restoring motion should happen gradually and should follow medical guidance, especially because the scaphoid bone may require careful loading progressions.

Common signs of wrist stiffness or limited range of motion
  • Difficulty bending the wrist forward or backward
  • Stiffness after a cast, splint, brace, or surgery
  • Trouble typing, reaching, lifting, pushing, or weight-bearing
  • A tight, blocked, or guarded feeling when moving the wrist
  • Reduced wrist motion compared with the other side
How physical therapy may help wrist stiffness

Physical therapy may include protected range-of-motion exercises, gentle stretching when appropriate, thumb mobility, forearm mobility, hand mobility, elbow and shoulder mobility, manual therapy when appropriate, and a home program to restore useful motion. Your therapist will help improve mobility while respecting fracture healing and any surgical precautions.

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Thumb stiffness, grip weakness, or hand fatigue

After a scaphoid fracture, thumb motion and grip strength may also be affected. Pinching, opening jars, typing, using tools, carrying objects, gripping, lifting, or using the hand for daily tasks may feel weak, stiff, or uncomfortable.

This may be especially noticeable after longer immobilization, surgery, swelling, thumb stiffness, or reduced hand use during recovery. Physical therapy often looks beyond the wrist joint and helps restore the entire hand and arm’s ability to move and function together.

Common signs of thumb stiffness, grip weakness, or hand fatigue
  • Difficulty gripping, pinching, typing, or using tools
  • Weak grip or hand fatigue with daily tasks
  • Stiffness in the thumb, fingers, wrist, or forearm after immobilization
  • Difficulty opening jars, carrying bags, writing, or lifting objects
  • Reduced confidence using the injured hand for normal activity
How physical therapy may help thumb mobility and grip strength

Physical therapy may include thumb mobility, finger mobility, wrist and hand exercises, grip strengthening, pinch strengthening, progressive forearm strengthening, and functional task practice. The goal is to restore comfortable use of the entire hand and arm, not just improve wrist motion measurements.

Weakness or difficulty lifting, pushing, pulling, or returning to activity

Weakness is common after a scaphoid fracture because the wrist and hand may be protected for several weeks and the muscles around the hand, forearm, elbow, and shoulder may lose strength. Lifting, carrying groceries, pushing doors, pulling objects, doing manual work, returning to workouts, or using the hand for sports may feel difficult at first.

Weakness may be related to reduced use, pain inhibition, fracture healing, surgical precautions, grip weakness, wrist instability, shoulder or elbow weakness, or fear of loading the injured side. Strength usually needs to be rebuilt gradually so the wrist can handle real-life demands again.

Common signs of weakness or difficulty using the hand
  • Difficulty lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, or gripping
  • Weakness with typing, tool use, or weight-bearing through the hand
  • Fatigue during work, workouts, or household activity
  • Reduced confidence using the injured hand or wrist
  • Symptoms that increase when activity becomes heavier or more repetitive
How physical therapy may help weakness and activity limitations

Physical therapy may include progressive grip strengthening, wrist strengthening, forearm strengthening, finger and thumb strengthening, elbow and shoulder strengthening, lifting mechanics, and graded return to pushing, pulling, carrying, and weight-bearing. The goal is to restore strength without rushing the healing bone or irritated tissues.

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Related conditions and symptoms physical therapy may address

Scaphoid fracture rehab can overlap with several wrist, hand, thumb, forearm, tendon, ligament, nerve, and post-traumatic concerns. A physical therapy evaluation can help identify whether limitations are related to fracture healing, surgical recovery, stiffness, weakness, swelling, nerve symptoms, or another injury from the same event.

Post-surgical scaphoid fracture rehab

Some scaphoid fractures are treated surgically with fixation. After surgery, rehab must follow the surgeon’s precautions and healing timeline while gradually restoring wrist motion, grip strength, thumb function, and daily hand use.

Physical therapy may include protected mobility, scar mobility when appropriate, progressive strengthening, lifting mechanics, and return-to-work or sport progression.

Wrist stiffness after cast or immobilization

Wrist stiffness may develop after a cast, splint, brace, surgery, swelling, pain, or guarding. Stiffness can affect wrist bending, straightening, forearm rotation, typing, lifting, pushing, gripping, and daily tasks.

Physical therapy may include range-of-motion exercises, gradual stretching, manual therapy when appropriate, strengthening, and strategies to restore comfortable function.

Thumb stiffness or thumb weakness

Because the scaphoid is located near the base of the thumb, thumb stiffness and weakness may occur after immobilization or protective guarding. This can affect pinching, gripping, texting, writing, opening jars, and tool use.

Physical therapy may include thumb mobility, pinch strengthening, grip training, and task-specific hand-use practice.

Wrist tendinitis after fracture

Wrist tendinitis may develop during recovery when tendons around the wrist become irritated from immobilization, altered mechanics, weakness, or returning to activity too quickly.

Physical therapy may assess tendon loading, grip strength, wrist mobility, forearm mechanics, and activity triggers to guide treatment.

Carpal tunnel or nerve-related symptoms after wrist fracture

After a wrist fracture, some people may notice numbness, tingling, burning, weakness, or symptoms into the hand. These symptoms may involve nerve irritation, swelling, positioning, or injury-related sensitivity.

Physical therapy may assess nerve symptoms, wrist position, grip strength, finger motion, shoulder mechanics, and whether symptoms suggest the need for additional medical evaluation.

Post-traumatic wrist arthritis or joint irritation

Some scaphoid fractures can contribute to longer-term wrist joint irritation, stiffness, swelling, or post-traumatic arthritis symptoms, especially if healing is delayed or joint mechanics remain limited. These symptoms may affect loading tolerance, grip strength, and wrist motion over time.

Physical therapy may help improve useful motion, build strength, manage flare-ups, and support return to daily activity while respecting joint tolerance.

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Can physical therapy help after a Scaphoid Fracture?

Physical therapy can often help after a scaphoid fracture by restoring wrist mobility, improving thumb mobility, reducing guarding, rebuilding grip and hand strength, improving elbow and shoulder mechanics, and helping you return to daily activity, work, exercise, or sport. Rehab should match the healing stage of the fracture and any medical or surgical precautions.

The treatment plan should match your symptoms, fracture type, healing timeline, and goals. Early care may focus on protection, safe movement, swelling management, and maintaining nearby joint mobility. Later care may include progressive strengthening, lifting mechanics, gripping, pushing and pulling progressions, weight-bearing preparation, sport-specific drills, and return-to-activity planning.

What your physical therapist may evaluate

  • How the injury happened and whether a fall, collision, or direct trauma was involved
  • Fracture location, healing stage, imaging reports when available, and medical restrictions
  • Whether surgery was performed and what precautions were provided
  • Pain location, swelling, tenderness, bruising history, and symptom behavior
  • Wrist range of motion, thumb mobility, finger mobility, forearm rotation, and elbow mobility
  • Grip strength, pinch strength, forearm strength, wrist strength, and upper body endurance
  • Lifting, carrying, gripping, pushing, pulling, typing, weight-bearing, and work mechanics
  • Sleep position, work demands, sport demands, and return-to-activity goals

What treatment may include

Treatment for scaphoid fracture rehab may include safe movement education, activity modification, protected mobility, wrist range-of-motion exercises, thumb mobility, finger mobility, forearm rotation exercises, grip strengthening, pinch strengthening, wrist strengthening, forearm strengthening, elbow and shoulder strengthening, posture strategies, manual therapy when appropriate, scar mobility when appropriate, lifting mechanics, weight-bearing progressions, sport-specific progression, and a home exercise program.

The goal is to protect healing, restore comfortable movement, rebuild hand and wrist strength, improve arm control, and help you return to sleep, work, typing, lifting, exercise, sports, and daily activity. Your therapist may also help you understand when symptoms are expected and when additional medical evaluation may be needed.

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When should I see a physical therapist?

You may want to see a physical therapist after a scaphoid fracture when your medical provider clears you for rehab or when you need guidance on safe movement, wrist mobility, strengthening, or returning to normal activity. Physical therapy can be especially helpful if you feel unsure about what movements are safe or how quickly to progress activity.

Because a scaphoid fracture involves a broken wrist bone that can require careful healing, medical evaluation is important first. Rehab should follow any healing timeline, restrictions, imaging guidance, or post-surgical precautions provided by your physician or surgeon.

You may benefit from physical therapy if:

  • You are recovering from a diagnosed scaphoid fracture
  • You have wrist stiffness, weakness, swelling, or limited range of motion after immobilization
  • You are unsure how to safely move, sleep, dress, shower, type, or use the hand
  • You have difficulty bending the wrist, moving the thumb, lifting, gripping, pushing, or pulling
  • You feel weak, guarded, or less confident using the injured wrist
  • You want help returning to work, gym activity, sports, or daily routines
  • You need guidance after scaphoid fracture surgery
  • You want a gradual plan for mobility, strength, mechanics, and return to activity

When to seek medical care sooner

Seek medical care sooner if you have a suspected wrist fracture, thumb-side wrist pain after a fall, tenderness near the anatomical snuffbox, visible deformity near the wrist, severe swelling, inability to move the wrist or fingers, numbness or tingling into the hand, open wound, signs of infection after surgery, worsening pain, fever, chest pain, shortness of breath, or symptoms that are rapidly worsening. If symptoms feel urgent or unusual, seek medical evaluation promptly.

If you are unsure where to start, call us. We can help you decide whether physical therapy is an appropriate next step or whether medical evaluation may be needed first.

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Do I need a doctor referral first?

Often, your medical provider will give guidance about when to begin physical therapy after a scaphoid fracture. Some patients may be able to schedule directly, but fracture rehab should follow any restrictions, imaging guidance, or timelines provided by your physician or surgeon.

For a new or suspected scaphoid fracture, medical evaluation is recommended first to confirm the injury, assess alignment, and determine whether surgery or immobilization is needed. The easiest way to know the best next step is to call us. We can help you understand whether your insurance requires a referral, whether physical therapy is appropriate now, and what steps are needed to schedule an appointment.

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Why Choose PT Effect for Treatment?

Choosing the right physical therapy office can make a major difference in how supported, understood, and confident you feel during recovery. At PT Effect, treatment is built around personalized care, hands-on attention, and a plan that helps you move better with less pain.

  • You get one-on-one care with a Licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy. Every session is focused on you, your symptoms, your injury history, and your goals. This allows your therapist to give you more attention, adjust your plan as you heal, and help you understand what is happening with your wrist and hand.
  • You get a treatment plan made for your specific recovery. Your scaphoid fracture rehab plan, healing stage, surgical precautions when relevant, movement limitations, daily activity demands, work tasks, exercise routine, sport goals, and lifestyle are all part of the plan. Instead of a generic exercise routine, your care is based on what you need to return to daily activity safely.
  • You get hands-on care that helps identify how your body is moving. PT Effect uses manual therapy when appropriate and detailed movement assessment to better understand wrist mobility, thumb motion, grip strength, forearm mechanics, elbow mechanics, shoulder support, posture, and pain triggers. This helps your therapist treat the full movement picture instead of only chasing symptoms.
  • You get help sooner, without unnecessary delays. Wrist stiffness, weakness, and uncertainty after a fracture can interrupt work, workouts, sleep, and daily activity quickly. PT Effect works to schedule patients as quickly as possible so you can get guidance and begin moving toward recovery.
  • You get support for both recovery and long-term movement goals. Treatment is not just about feeling better for the day. Your therapist can help you build mobility, strength, endurance, control, and confidence so you can return to meaningful activities with better hand and wrist function.
  • You get care in a modern, well-equipped physical therapy office. PT Effect’s offices are designed to support effective treatment, exercise, strengthening, mobility work, upper body mechanics training, and hands-on therapy. The goal is to give you the space, tools, and guidance needed to make meaningful progress.
  • You get a team that treats the way you move, not just where you hurt. Your recovery may be influenced by wrist mobility, thumb mobility, grip strength, finger stiffness, shoulder strength, elbow mechanics, posture, work demands, sport goals, lifting mechanics, or nearby joints and muscles. Your therapist can look at the full picture and help address the factors contributing to your limitations.
  • You get clear guidance for what to do between visits. Recovery does not only happen in the clinic. Your therapist can give you practical home exercises, activity modifications, positioning strategies, lifting guidance, strengthening progressions, and movement tools so you know how to keep improving outside of your appointments.
  • You get help understanding your scheduling and insurance options. PT Effect makes it easy to request an appointment, ask for more information, or have the team check your insurance. This helps remove guesswork and gives you a clearer next step.
  • You get two convenient locations. PT Effect serves patients in both San Diego and San Marcos, so you can choose the office that works best for your routine.

Start Treatment With PT Effect

Recovering from a scaphoid fracture can make daily activity, work, hobbies, and exercise feel uncertain, especially when thumb-side wrist pain, stiffness, weakness, swelling, or limited range of motion interferes with typing, gripping, lifting, pushing, pulling, or normal routines. PT Effect can help you better understand safe movement, rebuild hand and wrist strength, improve mechanics, and create a treatment plan focused on helping you return to activity with more confidence.

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Mark Shulman

Dr. Mark Shulman

Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT), FAAOMPT, COMT, CSCS

Founder

Fellow of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists.


Mark Shulman

Dr. Allison McKay

Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT), PRPC

Co-Founder


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info@pteffect.com

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The Physical Therapy Effect

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San Diego, CA 92101

The Physical Therapy Effect

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San Marcos, CA 92078