Carpal Tunnel in Pregnancy — What, Why, How, What If
4/4/2026
What: Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is compression of the median nerve as it passes through the carpal tunnel at the base of the palm. In pregnancy CTS commonly causes numbness, tingling, burning or pins-and-needles in the thumb, index, middle and the thumb-side of the ring finger, sometimes with weakness or trouble gripping.
Why it matters: Pregnancy-related fluid shifts, hormonal changes (estrogen, progesterone, relaxin), and small mechanical changes in how you hold or use your hands can raise pressure in the tunnel and trigger symptoms. CTS can interfere with sleep, feeding, dressing, and safe care of the baby. Most pregnancy-related cases improve after delivery, but persistent numbness or progressive weakness needs prompt attention.
How to manage (safe, practical steps):
- Night splinting: Wear a neutral wrist splint at night to reduce nerve pressure.
- Activity and ergonomics: Break repetitive tasks, alternate hands, use a supportive feeding pillow, keep wrists near neutral, and hold phones at eye level.
- Exercises and therapy: Gentle, pain-free nerve-gliding movements and supervised hand therapy can help—ask a therapist experienced in pregnancy-safe care.
- Short-term relief: Cool compresses after repetitive tasks, pacing chores, and short rest breaks reduce symptoms.
- Medical options: If conservative care fails, clinicians may consider pregnancy-safe options such as targeted corticosteroid injections or a referral to a hand specialist; surgery is rarely recommended during pregnancy unless there is progressive motor loss.
- Workplace tips: Use an ergonomic keyboard/mouse, enable voice-to-text, and set frequent timers for movement breaks.
What if you don’t treat it or want to go further:
- Watch for red flags: sudden severe weakness, persistent loss of function, or muscle wasting at the base of the thumb—these need urgent evaluation.
- If symptoms persist beyond 6–12 weeks postpartum or worsen, seek re-evaluation for diagnostic testing (nerve conduction studies or ultrasound) and discussion of definitive options such as surgery after delivery.
- Resources and questions: ask your clinician which treatments are safe for your pregnancy or breastfeeding stage, whether injections are appropriate, and for referrals to certified hand therapists. Professional guidance from ACOG and neurology/hand-surgery sources can inform decisions.
You’re not alone—many people improve after birth with stepwise care. Small ergonomic changes, timely therapy, and clear follow-up plans protect hand function while you focus on caring for your baby. If you’re unsure or notice worsening weakness, contact your prenatal team promptly.
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