Krisha Hospital

TFCC Tear: Wrist Cartilage Injury Causes, Symptoms and Treatment

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You have had pain on the little-finger side of your wrist for weeks or months. It gets worse when you grip something hard, twist a doorknob, or push yourself up from a chair. An X-ray showed nothing. Your doctor suspects a TFCC tear.

TFCC tears are more common than most people realise — and they are frequently missed or misdiagnosed as “wrist sprain.” Understanding what the TFCC is and how it is treated can save months of unnecessary pain.

TFCC injuries are classified as either traumatic (Type 1) or degenerative (Type 2):

  • Traumatic tears result from a fall on an outstretched hand (FOOSH), a sudden twisting injury (like catching a fall with the arm extended), or sports impact. Common in cricket, tennis, badminton, gymnastics, and martial arts. (See also: Hand Fracture Treatment)
  • Degenerative tears occur gradually from age-related wear — particularly in people with a longer ulna bone (positive ulnar variance), and in those who do heavy repetitive gripping or forearm rotation at work.

Symptoms of a TFCC Tear

The symptoms are usually localised to the ulnar side of the wrist — the side of the wrist nearest to the little finger:

  • Aching pain on the ulnar (little-finger) side of the wrist
  • Pain worsens with gripping, twisting, or weight-bearing through the wrist
  • A clicking, popping, or grinding sensation when rotating the forearm
  • Weakness of grip — difficulty wringing cloth, opening jars, or turning keys
  • Swelling around the ulnar wrist, particularly after activity
  • Feeling of wrist instability — the joint feels “loose” or unreliable

How is a TFCC Tear Diagnosed?

Clinical examination includes specific provocation tests — the TFCC grind test and piano key test — which reproduce the patient’s pain. However, imaging is essential:

  • MRI wrist — the gold standard for detecting TFCC tears. MRI arthrogram (with contrast injected into the joint) gives even higher accuracy.
  • X-ray — checks for ulnar variance (a longer-than-normal ulna increases TFCC stress) and rules out fractures.
  • Wrist arthroscopy — the definitive diagnostic tool. A camera is inserted into the wrist joint under local anaesthesia. It is both diagnostic and therapeutic.

TFCC Tear Treatment Options

1. Conservative (Non-Surgical) Treatment — For Partial Tears

Partial or degenerative TFCC tears often respond well to non-surgical management:

  • Wrist immobilisation — a below-elbow cast or brace for 4–6 weeks to allow the tear to heal
  • Anti-inflammatory medication — NSAIDs to reduce pain and swelling
  • Corticosteroid injection — into the wrist joint for pain relief when inflammation is significant
  • Hand therapy / physiotherapy — wrist strengthening and proprioception exercises after the immobilisation period

2. Surgical Treatment — Wrist Arthroscopy

Surgery is recommended for complete tears, tears causing wrist instability, or cases that have not responded to 3–6 months of conservative treatment. Wrist arthroscopy is the preferred approach:

  • Performed under local or regional block anaesthesia as a day-case procedure
  • Small keyhole incisions — usually 2–3 portals, each less than 5mm
  • The surgeon can either debride (clean up) a degenerative tear or repair (stitch) a traumatic tear
  • If the ulna is too long (positive ulnar variance), an ulnar shortening osteotomy may be combined

Recovery After TFCC Repair

TimelineRecovery Stage
Week 1–2Wrist immobilised in plaster/brace. Fingers kept mobile.
Week 2–6Graduated wrist mobility exercises begin with therapist.
Week 6–12Progressive strengthening. Light activities permitted.
3–6 monthsReturn to sport and full activities. Pain significantly reduced.
TFCC Wrist Recovery
⚠️
Don't ignore ulnar wrist pain: Many patients live with TFCC pain for 6–12 months thinking it is "just a sprain." Delayed treatment can lead to arthritis. If pain persists beyond 6 weeks, get an MRI.
💡 Protecting your wrist during recovery
  • Avoid forearm rotation activities (turning, twisting, wringing).
  • Use a wrist brace during work or sport even after the acute phase.
  • Grip strength exercises should begin only when the surgeon advises.
  • Inform your physiotherapist specifically that you have a TFCC injury.
Early diagnosis and specialized care at Krisha Hand Hospital ensure the best path to recovery and long-term wrist health.

Conclusion

In conclusion, a TFCC tear is more than a simple wrist sprain; it is an injury to a critical stabilizing structure that can lead to chronic instability and arthritis if left unaddressed. While many minor tears respond well to conservative management—such as splinting and specialized physiotherapy—severe or persistent cases often require the precision of arthroscopic surgery. Early diagnosis through clinical examination and imaging is vital. For patients experiencing ulnar-sided wrist pain, seeking a consultation with a hand and microsurgery specialist ensures a tailored treatment plan that restores both grip strength and pain-free rotation.

Persistent Ulnar Wrist Pain? It Could Be a TFCC Tear.

Dr. Karn Maheshwari has specialist expertise in wrist arthroscopy and TFCC repair. Get an accurate diagnosis and clear treatment plan at Krisha Hand Hospital, Ahmedabad.

Frequently Asked Questions

Partial TFCC tears can heal with adequate rest and immobilisation over 6–8 weeks. Complete tears and tears causing wrist instability typically do not heal without surgical intervention. An MRI helps determine the severity of the tear and guides the treatment decision.
 
TFCC tear pain is localised to the ulnar (little-finger) side of the wrist. It is typically described as a deep ache that worsens with gripping, forearm rotation, or weight-bearing through the wrist. Many patients also notice a clicking or popping sensation when rotating the forearm.
 
No — wrist arthroscopy is a minimally invasive keyhole procedure. It is performed as a day case under local or regional anaesthesia. Small portals of less than 5mm are used. Most patients go home the same day and begin rehabilitation within 2 weeks.
 
Most patients achieve significant pain relief by 6–8 weeks after surgery. Full recovery — including return to sport or heavy work — typically takes 3–6 months depending on the extent of the repair and rehabilitation compliance.
 
Krisha Hand Hospital, led by Dr. Karn Maheshwari (FNB Hand Surgery), specialises in wrist conditions including TFCC tears. Dr. Maheshwari is trained in wrist arthroscopy and can diagnose and treat TFCC injuries with precision — from conservative management to surgical repair.

Dr. Karn Maheshwari

FNB (Hand & Microsurgery) | MS Ortho | DNB Ortho | Founder, Krisha Hand Hospital

Dr. Karn Maheshwari is the founder of Krisha Hand Hospital, Ahmedabad, established in 2016. He is the only FNB-qualified hand surgeon across Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Madhya Pradesh.

With MS and DNB in Orthopedics, Dr. Maheshwari specializes in treating a wide range of hand and wrist conditions, including carpal tunnel syndrome, sports hand injuries, orthopedic hand surgery, ganglion cysts, mangled hand injuries, congenital hand differences, brachial plexus palsy, cerebral palsy & spastic hand, hand tendinopathy, hand microsurgery, hand swelling, hand transplants, hand reimplantation, rheumatoid hand deformities, and peripheral nerve injuries & compressive neuropathies.

Dr. Maheshwari’s unmatched expertise and patient-centric approach ensure world-class treatment, advanced surgical solutions, and optimal recovery for patients with complex hand and wrist conditions.

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