Jan-Feb
2007 Newsletter
Erik Dalton, PhD,
Certified Advanced Rolfer
Happy New Year! Boy, they just seem to go
faster every year. Let’s begin the January/ February 2007
newsletter brigade with a twist of irony--wrapping up the last
edition of our 2006 “Tour of the Upper Extremities”. I’d
planned on starting again with the shoulder and writing on
soft tissue techniques that follow the mobilization routines
but have decided to surprise you (and me) in the next
issue.
Wrist and
Hand
Both professional and recreational athletes depend on
their hands, wrists and fingers for proper strength, grip and
range of motion for optimal performance. Sprains
commonly occur during active sports or household falls. The
severity of minor injuries is often minimized under the
blanket category of a “sprain” causing clients to not seek
help for their problem. Sadly, a true sprain can take
weeks to heal leaving adherent scar tissue that glues bony
structures and causes structural malalignments that are often
difficult to fix.
Computer programmers, writers, artists, researchers,
and machinists often suffer overuse syndromes familiar to most
therapists such as trigger fingers, carpal tunnel and de
Quervain syndromes. Traditional bodywork often focuses only on
the soft tissue aspect of wrist and hand injuries when a more
holistic approach may prove more successful. Restoration of
proper wrist and hand biomechanics is crucial in preventing
formation of secondary inflammatory responses caused by
shearing forces as tendons move
across malaligned bony structures. Bracing,
including wrist supports, only conforms to postural
abnormalities creating further tightness resulting in
capsulitis, tendinosis, loss of flexibility and function. Any
bony malalignments affecting tendons crossing the wrist can
lead to compensatory problems such as carpal tunnel and elbow
strains such as medial and lateral epicondylitis. The
Myoskeletal goal is to restore joint play and alignment to the
27 bones in the hand and wrist allowing better soft tissue
glide. The use of bones as levers to mobilize fibrotic
ligaments and tendons is a very effective and safe way to
create joint play and relieve hand and wrist pain.
Testing Made
Easy
Many tests currently exist to identify
motion restricted joints but I wish to share a few I
have found particularly effective for treating the most
common pain generators. To assess mobility (glide) of
the triquetrum
and pisiform bones, ask the client to
touch the tip of the little finger (5th digit) with the tip of the thumb.
Next test the ring finger
(4th digit) to the thumb.
Weakness in ring finger’s opposition
to the thumb results from malalignment of triquetrum
and lunate. Weakness in the third
finger’s opposition to the thumb indicates a
malalignment of the scaphoid
and lunate combination; whereas, weakness
of the index finger’s opposition to the thumb indicates
malalignment of the scaphoid bone.
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Phase two of the evaluation process
requires that the client repeat each of the above tests.
But this time the client holds each digit tightly to the
thumb as the therapist (using moderate force) tries to
separate the two. If this separation maneuver allows the
circle of opposition to be broken, one should suspect a
high clinical probability for bony
misalignment.
After performing all the
‘digit-pulling’ tests to determine which carpals have
lost glide and joint play, the therapist proceeds with
the appropriate corrections. Since the lunate is the
only carpal bone that tends to “stick” (and sometimes
dislocate palmarly), it often
compresses the flexor tendons and the median nerve. So,
if the 4th digit (lunate) test was positive,
start with the following correction. |


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Lunate
and Triquetrum Alignment
With the
client’s elbow and wrist slightly flexed (palm up),
therapist and clients’ fingers interlace allowing the
therapist’s right thumb to glide superiorly past the
pisiform until it bumps into the ulna.
By moving
slightly medially—staying away from median nerve and
transverse carpal ligament, the thumb contacts the
proximal edge of the triquetrum and lunate.
Concurrently, the left thumb glides superiorly to the
scaphoid/radius junction.
Therapist
extends and gently tractions the elbow while flexing the
client’s wrist with the intention of driving a “wedge”
between the radius/ulna and the proximal carpal row.
Holding with
mild sustained anterior/inferior pressure, the client
gently attempts wrist extension against therapist’s
resistance to a count of five and
relaxes.
Again, the
therapist gently tractions the entire arm and hand while
depressing the proximal row against the distal row to
restore glide and joint play to all the carpals. Tough
adhesions may require side to side wiggling of the arm
and hand while maintaining traction.
This
technique mobilizes the lunate dorsally while helping to
separate scaphoid from the radius. Repeat three to five
times and retest the ring fingers ability to oppose the
thumb. |

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Mobilizing Proximal Carpal
Row
Once motion has been restored to
adhesive ligaments and the lunate repositioned, pronate
the hand to mobilize the triquetrum, pisiform, and
scaphoid.
Technique begins by grasping the
client’s hand and extending the arm and wrist so the
therapist’s thumbs butt up against the radius at the
scaphoid-lunate junction. Therapist’s hands and hooked
thumbs traction the entire arm holding a gentle
sustained pressure as the client slowly attempts wrist
flexion to a count of five against therapist’s
resistance.
Upon relaxation, the therapist brings
the wrists into more extension to restore carpal glide
and bony alignment. This routine is repeated three to
five times. The therapist’s thumbs then begin examining
for any bony fixation along the radioulnar
ridge…correcting any newly discovered bony/ligamentous
fixations. Test all fingers with the
‘digit-pulling’ technique.
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Metacarpal Alignment
Once the proximal row has been
successfully mobilized, using a slight force, distract
the metacarpal phalangeal joints one at a time with
client’s hand in a neutral position. This maneuver helps
separate the metacarpals from the distal carpal row
while restoring carpal glide and joint play.
Now that the metacarpals have been
mobilized, the proximal and distal phalanges can be
retracted to a neutral position similar to when one
pulls the fingers and causes joints to
“pop”. |
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Handshake
Assessment
The handshake technique helps
determine if the carpal rows are now gliding without
resistance.
Therapist’s left hand grasps the
client’s forearm and his right hand holds her right hand
as if shaking hands.
The client is asked to relax while the
therapist glides her hand in radial and ulnar abduction
while bracing the forearm.
Any resistance encountered may
indicate further mobilization of the proximal row should
be repeated. |
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Metacarpal-Phalangeal
Release
Repeat this repositioning
by again releasing the metacarpal phalangeals and distal
phalangeals. Finalize with the handshake abduction
motion of the radius and ulna to ensure that the
proximal carpals are properly repositioned.
The
scaphoid-trapezium complex is often more difficult than
the triquetrum-pisiform complex to mobilize. Recall that
the scaphoid should have the greatest mobility (up to
one centimeter) but is commonly fixated forming a hard
knot on the back of the
hand. |
Check
your own scaphoid…can you get it to move?
Many of your true carpal tunnel
clients present with a cupped hand caused by a fibrotic
transverse carpal ligament and fixated carpals.
Soft tissue work alone often ends in
frustration until joint play is restored to all wrist
and hand bones.
Additional wrist and hand mobilization
techniques are covered in my Volume III,
Myoskeletal Shoulder, Arm and Hand video set. |
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